The Tim Ferriss Show - #811: 2x Olympic Archery Medalist Jake Kaminski — Behind-the-Scenes Stories of Coaching Tim, What Archery Teaches About High Performance, and Excellence Under Pressure
Episode Date: May 14, 2025Jake Kaminski is a two-time Olympic silver medalist in archery and a longtime member of the US Archery Team. He runs a successful YouTube channel, writes training guides, and develops high-pe...rformance gear under the Kaminski Archery brand. Sign up for the Kaminski Archery Backyard Championship here.Sponsors:Helix Sleep premium mattresses: https://HelixSleep.com/Tim (27% off all mattress orders) AG1 all-in-one nutritional supplement: https://DrinkAG1.com/Tim (1-year supply of Vitamin D (and 5 free AG1 travel packs) with your first subscription purchase.)Shopify global commerce platform, providing tools to start, grow, market, and manage a retail business: https://shopify.com/tim (one-dollar-per-month trial period)*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss show, where it is my job to deconstruct world class performers to tease out how they do what they do.
The routines, the belief structures, the training programs that you can apply to your own life. And I say training programs because my guest today is one of the best teachers and trainers I have found in the last several years in any discipline whatsoever.
His name is Jake Kaminsky.
Jake Kaminsky is a two-time Olympic silver medalist in archery and a
longtime member of the US archery team with more than a decade of international
competition experience.
He is very well known for his technical precision.
He is meticulous with gear and tuning, also with biomechanics, his deep knowledge of the
sport, and with all of that Jake helped lead the US to team silver medals at both the 2012
London and 2016 Rio Olympic Games.
Since retiring from Olympic competition, Jake has become a leading voice in the archery
world through content creation, product innovation and educational events. He runs a successful
YouTube channel, which is kind of the defacto archery technical channel. People from all
over the world have seen this over and over again. He is like the Taylor Swift meets,
you name it, Brad Pitt of the archery world. I've gone to events with him because he was
my coach and is my coach in archery. I had my
first competition end of January. We'll talk about that. So he, in addition to that, writes
training guides and develops high performance gear, which he manufactures in Austria. It
is as precise as you expect Jake Kaminsky to be under the Kaminsky archery brand. You can find him on YouTube,
Jake Kaminsky at Jake Kaminsky archery.
Kaminsky is K-A-M-I-N-S-K-I.
Website jakekaminsky.com and on Instagram and Facebook,
Jake underscore Kaminsky on Instagram,
Facebook Kaminsky Jake.
We'll link to all that stuff,
but really the big two are the YouTube channel,
Jake Kaminsky archery, and then the website, jakekaminsky.com. And we go all over the place in this conversation
is really a close examination of real world learning because he and I had to work around
and towards all sorts of things together. I'll explain how I chose him, how I found him,
and towards all sorts of things together. I'll explain how I chose him, how I found him,
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Yeah, nice to see you too.
I'm so glad to be doing this. We've had, I was joking before we recorded that we could just treat
this like conversation 678, something like that. We've had a lot of conversations.
Might be double that.
It might be double that. It's probably double that if we count texts
in the many, many thousands and then videos,
it just goes on and on.
So let's give people some context.
We're gonna do a deep dive into the world of archery.
We're going to do a deep dive into the world
of high performance, which transcends archery.
So if you think to yourself, archery,
man, I'm not interested in flinging arrows. Still listen, there's going to be a lot here. And we're also going to talk about
your coaching and our experience coach and student and what we did with that, which I
think is pretty special and fun to unpack. So we're going to go in a lot of different
rabbit holes, but let's start for people who are not familiar with Olympic
recurve. What does that mean? What is the sport? Sure. So the sport of Olympic archery, as I grew
up, it was just called recurve because that was the discipline, but now it's known as Olympic
archery because there's many different disciplines that have spun off from that kind of bow. But essentially what it is, is a sport of hyper precision.
It's just how good can you work with a machine, your bow, to produce the exact same result every single time at an extreme distance.
So when I grew up, we shot up to 100 yards, which is easy to see.
It's end zone to end zone on a football field.
But now the Olympic distance is 70 meters or 77 yards or
237 feet. So that's you know about three quarters of the way down the football field. So we're shooting an arrow
that distance the arrow reaches 12 to 13 feet in the air in an arching trajectory to the target. No
magnification. Zero magnification. No rear sight in fact.
So you don't even have something to a align up in the back other than a string.
You're using a blurry string that is very imprecise in your reference.
And for people who are trying to get an idea of what it means to perform at a very high
level, the center of the target, How large is that? And what does that mean for the amount of motion that is
permissible at the arrow point? The 10 ring, the maximum scoring ring is a 12.2 centimeters or
about the size of a CD. You have to not only take into consideration your alignment with that arrow
and that bow, but also you have wind. So there's a lot of factors or precipitation or yeah, anything,
anything but lightning.
Yeah.
And to hit that 10 ring, that 12.2 centimeter diameter ring, it is the margin
of error to hit that repeatedly is the diameter of a extra fine ball in an
extra fine ball point pen.
So just to put this in perspective, if you're not watching the video, you'll
still get it, but if you're watching the video.
All right, so you're trying to hit a CD.
For those of you who remember CDs.
It would be like the type of dish you might have
under a cup of coffee, maybe something like that.
It's small.
And then the amount of variance at the arrow tip
that will allow you to hit that consistently
is smaller than the point of this pen.
Not the pen, not the diameter of the pen,
the actual rolling point in a ball point.
Correct.
It's insane.
Correct, and now how often,
or how many arrows do you have to do that for?
And it's, cause it's not just one, it's more than that.
We shoot for a ranking round to seed us in our brackets for the Olympic Games.
We shoot 72 arrows. Your average like really high score. You're hitting that 10 ring probably
40 plus times out of 72 times. Yeah. So it's insane. That's the level. I'll give one more
bit of trivia that I did not know until we were literally just walking down this hallway,
which is that you have also hit the 10 ring from three quarters of a football field away
while standing on an endo board. For people who don't know what that is, it's like a balance board.
Imagine a skateboard deck that you could stand on and there's basically a huge rolling pin
underneath it and you place it on the pin and then you have to balance as you wob on. And there's basically a huge rolling pin underneath
it and you place it on the pin and then you have to balance as you wobble. And if you see someone
try this for the first time, it's disastrous and comical. And so to be able to stand on that and
hit the 10 ring, you guys can put them together. It's just, it is just an extra planetary
accomplishment. It's wild.
So let's back up and share some context
on how we first connected.
So the world of archery is,
I'm not gonna say it's opaque because it's not opaque,
but it can be difficult to navigate.
And when I was first trying to find potential coaches,
and I can come back to why I was doing that, I went where I went online, I went to YouTube. But one of the
challenges, as most people recognize is that let's just say for trick shooters, and there's
some amazing trick shooters, which is not to discount that as a discipline, but people can take a thousand attempts and
then show their best outcome.
And we were talking about this earlier, but when they actually go to retrieve their arrow,
look at the rest of the target face, not only retrieve their arrow, just look at the target
in frame behind them.
Oftentimes it's like there's a burlap wrap over the target because people use bag targets.
That's what they're called.
And you know how worn out they can get. Yours are nowhere near as worn out as 90 plus percent of
those trick shooters and yeah they show you that one impact but look at the target behind them.
And what I think what you're alluding to is that if you're hitting the center of the target
consistently you're basically going to carve out a sweet spot and then you have to replace
that portion of the target face
if it's replaceable.
There's a lot of, I suppose, selection and highlights online
and it can make it very, very difficult,
particularly if you're coming in as a novice,
you don't know how to sort or separate fact from fiction,
you don't know where to go.
And so what I ended up doing was asking myself a question
I ask a lot. And for people
who've read The 4-Hour Chef, which is actually about accelerated learning, this approach
will sound familiar, but this is a chance to see it unfold in recent history and sort
of in real time because we're still training. How can I find an objective measure for this
sport, for this discipline? And there are almost always options for instance i've had susan garrett on this podcast she is a multiple time.
Agility champion so dog agility champion she's a multiple national time champion and that is an objective.
Competition with set scoring, with set penalties under time, and there's nowhere
to hide.
So that is how I ended up having Susan Garrett on the podcast versus a million celebrity
dog coaches where it's impossible to actually know what you're buying because you don't
have any of the outtakes.
You don't have a lot of objective measurement.
And in this case, I was like, all right.
Well, I think Archery is in the Olympics.
Let me look this up.
Oh, it's in the Olympics.
Great.
Let me try to use that as a sorting mechanism.
And that is how I found your amazing YouTube channel.
You want to give it a plug?
What's just Jake Kaminsky.
Yep.
I mean, when we've gone anywhere related to archery, it's like trying to move around
with the rock or Lady Gaga or some combination of the two. You just get mobbed because in
a world where it can be very difficult to decipher what is legitimate, you offer the
bona fides and a lot of really good technical instructions. So that's how I found you. Then
reached out and then lo and behold, here we are.
And it's really worked out incredibly well.
And my background just quickly, it's not that extensive,
but I've been bow hunting for at least 10 years.
A bit more than that, did rifle prior to that.
First hunt ever was with Steven Rinella
during the writing of The Four-Hour Chef.
So thanks to Steve Rinella, people can check him out.
Everything meat eater, also an amazing writer.
And I'll give people a bit of a flash forward
and then we can talk about all sorts of stuff,
including your kind of training regimen for yourself
and development and so on.
But began taking bare bow archery,
we can talk about what that is,
but it's effectively for the purposes of this conversation,
it's a competition classification.
And it dictates that you basically strip off
all the stabilizers, the clicker,
don't worry about these things, the sight, et cetera,
from an Olympic bow.
Essentially all the aids.
Yeah, all the aids.
Everything that makes it really good.
Yeah, you take off all of the performance aids and then you shoot with that particular bow.
And I became interested in barebow for a few reasons.
I saw it online on YouTube while I was tooling around trying to find something.
And there is something called Lancaster Classic.
Happens in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
Or Lancaster.
Lancaster.. Happens in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Or Lancaster. Lancaster, yes, exactly so and Lancaster archery supply is a
huge distributor of archery products and they hold this
competition once a year.
And it is for the barebow discipline.
I suppose the largest in the world.
I think so, yeah, I mean, it's at least the most prestigious, I suppose, has the biggest reach.
So it gets the most exposure and I think actually the most participation now, at least as of this
last year and a couple of years leading up to this, it's taken off and it is, I believe it's almost
the biggest, if not the biggest class as far as the amount of participation. Yeah. So you've got bare bow.
They also have compound.
They also have Olympic arteries, Olympic recurve.
They have hunting.
They have long bow now.
They've got all sorts of stuff.
So many different classes and bare bow was interesting
to me for a few reasons.
I have not done any real physical competition.
Well, now I have, but in 20 years, probably.
Last thing was tango in Argentina in 2004,
I suppose it was, long time ago.
And I wanted to compete, I love competing.
But I thought to myself, all right,
I wanna take a bit of a oblique approach here.
And I think there's a misunderstanding about what I do,
sometimes or what I often focus on,
even as early as the four-hour workweek.
The goal is not to find the cheap shortcut.
The goal is to look for oblique, maybe uncommon approaches to various problems or goals or
whatever.
That's it.
And in this case, I looked at the number of people competing in barebone as I write, it's
a smaller population at the number of people competing in Baraboo and I was like, all right, it's a smaller population at the higher levels. And it is sometimes nicknamed the struggle stick
for folks. And part of the reason it has so much viewership online compared to some of
these other disciplines is as they would say, like in Baraboo, anything can happen literally
at any moment at any moment. And if somebody lets their nerves take control, if there's any number of issues, they could
really fire on the target, but out of the bullseye, let's just say by substantial margin,
which opens up the possibility for comebacks, surprise turns, reversals of fortune, and
it makes it fun to watch.
And I thought, okay, well, that seems like a fun place to bookmark as a possible competition
and ended up competing end of January.
We will come back to that and had, I suppose, about six months of real training, real focused
training.
And so we'll come back to what that looked like, but let's talk about Jake.
So how did the archery thing start?
And why don't you just take that and run with it. And then I might pepper in questions along the way.
So I grew up in a very small town in Elm and New York, kind of
south of Buffalo, New York.
And my dad was a volunteer fireman at the local fire
department and they have a spring and a fall gun
raffle every year.
And, you know, they raffle off guns and a canoe
full of beer or whatever else.
Right.
And one of them was a bow and he won the bow gun
raffle.
And this was, I was five years old and of course,
this was a, you know, hunting bow for an adult.
So there's no way a five-year-old is going to use that.
So we found, I think we went to Kmart and bought a bear hunting compound for a
kid, just fiberglass, super cheap, very basic.
My parents bought me that for my sixth birthday.
So on my sixth birthday, after we got hay bales from a local farmer or whatever,
threw up a target and I shot my first arrow at 20 yards and 20 yards is more than double the
distance that you would really want to have any person, not just a kid,
shoot their first arrow.
I vividly remember my very first arrow I ever shot because I literally shot
an inside out X on my very first year.
You should explain what that is.
So inside out X meaning if you have your 10 ring,
like the maximum scoring ring,
inside the 10 ring is a X ring.
It's about the size,
it's like between a diamond and nickel, about that size.
And inside out meaning I put the arrow
in the dead center of the target
where it did not touch the ring of the X.
So it was inside of a dime, roughly.
My very first arrow.
We won't talk about the next several hundred arrows.
I mean, thank God for that first arrow, right?
Yeah, I mean, I was hooked.
I mean, it's kind of crazy.
I've heard this story to think,
like if your first 20 arrows had been all over the place,
would it have been a different story?
Like maybe, you know?
Maybe.
It's crazy.
Yeah. Who knows?
Yeah, really no way to know.
And I was with my brother, Matt.
He was out there shooting with me.
I don't know if he shot before me,
but after I shot the X, he's like,
give me that thing.
And of course he didn't hit the target either.
Yeah.
And then it just kind of started from there.
We found that local club that was down the street.
It's a Joad club,
a junior Olympic archery development club.
There's many of those around the country and the U S they're at local hunting
shops, basically, if they have a junior development program, we found that
club because that's where the bow was bought for the gun raffle.
And luckily it was about a five minute drive from our house.
And so every Saturday mornings, they had a junior development program.
And so I'd go there and start shooting with them.
And so every Saturday morning I'd be there no matter what, because I
enjoyed it so much.
The progression, it went from shooting compound.
So I shot compound for about six years.
Let's pause for a second.
Just for people who have no archery context.
And by the way, my not too secret agenda for this is I want everybody
to go out and try archery.
It has been such a godsend for
me to have that constant for a million reasons turns into a form of meditation. It can also
be just as frustrating, if not more frustrating than golf, but let's put that aside for now.
It has been such a gift to my life to have archery and to be able to train with you.
It's really been tremendous.
So I have this not so secret agenda of getting
as many people as possible who are listening
to try archery, which by the way,
is very much within reach for basically everybody listening.
If you have a smartphone and you're listening to this,
you can try archery.
You do not need to buy anything.
But let me explain a term.
So longbow is about the simplest thing you can imagine.
It's a let's call it a stick.
It's bent. And then you have a string attached to it.
And you'll see this in many different indigenous hunting cultures.
You'll see it all over the world.
Recurve. You will also see all over the world because they figure it out.
Well, you can make the bow a lot shorter
and have the ends of the bow recurve out like
kind of towards the target to apply more tension.
It's like an advanced long bow using laminations of wood instead of just a stick.
Right, exactly.
So now you have this laminated bow and you see that all over the world, all over the
world and there are different iterations of that.
You've got the slightly different idea but horse bow which of course i'm i'm in love with that's a whole separate podcast and so on and so forth so if you imagine
Robin Hood bow in your mind i think it was a recurve in maybe the cartoon at least.
Made out of.
made out of
fancier materials whether it's
Carbon or aluminum or something else then you have the idea of what I'm shooting when I'm doing say bare bow and then a compound
has Various cams you can think of them almost like cams on a weightlifting machine actually police
Yeah, police poison cams. So it's like when you are in a gym using a machine, pushing or pulling, there's a strength curve.
So the amount of exertion required changes
over the course of that full range.
And in the case of a compound bow, very similar.
And what makes it such an efficient, amazing hunting tool,
there are a few factors.
One is in the beginning, it's hard, it's hard, it's hard.
And then there's a letoff.
So you might have, I'm making up these numbers,
but 60 pound draw weight and then you're holding,
what would you say?
Maybe between eight and 12 pounds.
Eight and 12 pounds.
Depending on if it's a hunting or a competition.
Yeah, right.
So eight or 12 pounds, when you're at anchor
and to define that, that's when you have
your very simple terms.
Your hand that is attached
to the string, whether you're using fingers or a mechanical release, when your hand is
kind of glued to your face and you always glue it to the same place to set up the rifle
barrel, so to speak. And that's one element of what makes compounds so interesting. The
second is when you have these additional mechanical aids, let's just say the speed of the arrow is just dramatically more dramatically, dramatically more.
The main difference in the compound versus everything else is there's one string on every other bow called a single string bow, whether that be a trad bow, a stick bow, traditional bow, yeah,ve, a bare bow, whatever that is.
Whereas compound has three strings, essentially.
When you look at it, you can see multiple strings because the string tension, as you
pull it back, it builds, but then it transfers that tension into the cables, which are the
other two strings that the arrow is not attached to.
And so that then catapults the arrow at an incredible rate of speed when you let it go.
Yeah.
And when you go to your local range, which we'll get to, and I recommend you can
try all of these different options in a lot of places. And if you can only start with
compound, great. Maybe you, that's where I started. Maybe you stay with compound. Yeah.
And at the highest levels, they do some absurd, absurd things. Yeah. Actually I just have
to give credit where credit is due. So also have had some fantastic conversations with
Joel Turner shot IQ, his son, Bodie. Do you want to just explain what he's capable of doing?
Sure. So you know that X that I shot the inside out on my first arrow. So he will shoot that X.
So that same hitting that dime for about 120 arrows in a row essentially under pressure when there's
a hundred thousand dollars plus on the line and you would not know just looking
at the kid he is just stone-cold ice in his veins you'd have no idea that he even
had a heartbeat just watching him shoot because he's incredible to be able to
hit that thing repeatedly with so much precision and repeatability under pressure,
most importantly, it's just, it's ridiculous.
We'll get to talking about a little bit about compound and how there's a, I guess, a less
steep learning curve.
You get really good, really fast as far as precision, but still to win with a compound
in a competition, it still requires immense amounts of effort and energy and training.
So we're going to come back to your trajectory in a second, pun intended, but let's mention
that briefly because I didn't really fill in the gaps.
The compound bow that I used for hunting was fantastic.
I thought it was a great transition for me because I was more familiar with rifle and
so on.
It was actually a fantastic transition and I would hunt once a year, let's just call it something like that, use everything,
eat everything for those people wondering. And the hop from rifle and so on to compound was
actually quite easy. I needed to brush up on a few things, obviously learn some technical details,
think about back tension a bit, etc. But for someone with a sports background, it was pretty
straightforward. And if you're thinking about the target size, right, the kind of kill zone on
whether it's a deer or an elk, I mean, certainly a lot larger on an elk, but you can get to a point if you
have some kinesthetic awareness very quickly, I would say within a week for a lot of folks,
maybe.
Yeah.
So to be like ethical as a hunter to know that when you take the shot, you're not going
to do the animal any suffering.
It will be a very, very painless and fast.
And it takes more time to get to that point.
Well, depends.
It depends on the distance that you're shooting.
So say we'll say 20 yards.
So what I was gonna say is 20 yards
just as people can imagine.
So 20 yards, your average person,
I could get them to hit that pie plate.
It depends on the coach, of course,
and depends on explanations
and the individual person as well.
But I would say easily within a week,
you're gonna hit that thing nine to 10 times out of 10 every time within a day.
You'll hit it probably six to eight times out of 10 because it's just easy
relatively speaking to get to that level.
Yeah. And there are a lot of reasons for that, right? I mean, you have the letoff,
you have the peep, which is a rear site, which is basically a rear side.
It's a tiny circle of fixed to the string itself. You have a level on the bow. You is a rear sight which is basically a rear sight it's a tiny circle fixed to the string itself you have a level on the bow you have a level
there are many things that allow you to do that quickly but then to get to the
highest levels we were talking about this at lunch it's kind of like okay
let's get you down the hill on a snowboard yeah within a week we can
probably get you down some easy terrain on a snowboard okay now you want to
compete in the X games
Yeah, all right. Well, good luck. That's gonna take about ten years, right? Yeah, that's a rule for me
I mean that's that's that's Bodhi and anyone who performs at that level absolutely
So not to take it away from them like their proficiency level is insane
Yeah, and to be able to do it all the time under pressure is even more insane
You know, it's one thing to do it in your backyard, right.
And be that backyard world champion that so many people claim to be.
Yeah.
Right.
But to do it in front of other people on a stage with crazy lighting,
cheering crowds, money on the line, potentially putting food on your table
or not at the end of the day too.
That's just a whole lot of added pressure.
And so it's different.
We'll probably end up talking about Korea later and maybe we can just give a sneak peek.
I know we're going all over the place, but I remember you said to me at one point, and
please correct me if I'm getting this wrong. If each country could field as many athletes
as they wanted for a given sport that Korea would probably place one to a hundred at the
minimum bare minimum. Yeah. Yeah. It's basically there. Let's just call it basketball, football, baseball,
all wrapped into one. Yeah. It is their national sport. I mean, they are obscenely, obscenely good.
And you said to me before, if you or I were scouted and assessed early on, we wouldn't have made
the early cuts. No, you would have immediately because I'm cross-eyed because of your eye
dominance. Yeah, I'm right handed, but my left eye is my aiming eye., you would have immediately because I'm cross-eyed because of your eye dominance.
Yeah, I'm right handed, but my left eye is my aiming eye.
So I would have been gone.
I get a little bit too excited.
So I would have also been cut a hundred percent.
So what are some maybe good decisions or habits that you
made early on, let's just say before you ended up in San
Diego that you think helped you
to perform the way you performed in those early stages.
I think I can think of one example, but I'll hold it for now, which is where you're placing
yourself in the gym and how you're training.
I would say for me, one of the biggest advantages as a human, not just as an archer, but as
a human was the same kind of thing that you've saw was a meditative escape, right?
Because when you're shooting archery, that's the only thing you can focus on.
Cause if you're thinking about anything else, your scores go down, your groups
open up.
Yeah.
You know, if you're meditating poorly, very quickly, so I think for me, that
gave me a place to kind of go to, like I escaped to archery.
So I feel like that was definitely a big factor as to what led to that.
Just it naturally worked for me.
It wasn't difficult for me.
It is hard.
It's hard to stay focused on something so simple and repetitive over and over again,
but it was very enjoyable because it's just me, the bow and the arrow.
I love competing as well.
I used to play baseball when I was a kid and that competed with my archery time
because I was trying out for the state team in baseball or about to and winning
nationals shooting archery.
So it's like kind of had an easy decision there to make because I was already
winning nationals in archery.
So I went with that, but the overall just
enjoyment of shooting archery and enjoying
that me and the bow and no one else is going to
prevent me from beating someone else.
It's not like they're interfering with me or
trying to prevent me from shooting my arrow.
It's very nice.
And it's also a hundred percent objective.
There is no subjectivity.
There's no way for anyone to influence the outcome
other than maybe at some weird position, a judge to make a bad call, but it's almost never happening.
It just doesn't happen because it's such a small community and everybody holds each other accountable,
which is also another amazing thing about the community of archery. So I think that was a big
factor there as far as, you know, what you're
alluding to and bringing up and saying is I choose to make things as difficult
as possible when I'm practicing.
Like say if I'm at a range, I'll choose the lane nearest the wall.
So I have the least amount of space and we'll probably get into why we do
that in the little bit here, but I would suggest you to do the same thing as
we were working together and you at first were like, why, why would I do that in the little bit here, but I would suggest you to do the same thing as we were working together and you at first were like, why, why would I do that? It's much better to just stand by myself out in the open and have no influence.
Well, it's because when you're shooting on a line in a tournament, you have 24 inches of space roughly for yourself and the next guy's 24 inches than the next guy. And so you're stacked in there like a can of sardines.
Yeah, we get a photo of me at Lancaster for people who want to see what it looks like.
It's like, it's like a Tokyo subway car.
Oh, you just happened to all be holding bows with arrows.
Yes.
It's very crowded.
It is, it is, it is.
So anything you can do to make things more difficult to shoot in the rain, to
shoot in the wind, to shoot in the heat.
I would do because I don't know, maybe I just enjoy torturing myself.
I don't know, but I found it to be really important.
And once I got to the training center, listening to some of the other successful
athletes giving talks at the training center about their success and how things
went and what made them successful.
A lot of them was leaning into the same kind of thing, training
hard to make competition easy.
Yeah.
Well, it's very much an echo of the more you sweat and training
unless you bleed in combat.
Sure.
It's just like, you want to try to make your training harder if
possible than your competition.
There's there are limits to what you can do sometimes.
Sure.
We'll talk about that.
Even still like the range I grew up on, I would go there more than just
Saturdays and I'd shoot there by myself.
Cause no one else is there and I'm just shooting and my coach slash mentor at
the time, Harry Stabelle would come downstairs cause it was down in like a
secondary level below and he'd have a metal ashtray back then everybody smoked.
And he would just throw it randomly on the concrete ground when I'm at full
draw and I have to regain composure and shoot a shot, right?
So there's all sorts of weird stuff
that happened all the time.
Mr. Miyagi, action going on.
There's a lot of stuff that happened
that definitely would not fly in today's day and age.
So it's like, oh, you're dropping your bow arm.
That's like a thing that when you shoot the shot,
you have to maintain the bow up.
You don't want to drop the arm.
So he'd take his pocket knife out, flip it open, turn it upside and say, don't drop your arm, put it under your under my arm, or you're grabbing your bow.
Something else you don't want to do is hold onto it.
There's a grip on a bow, but you don't want to grip it.
You just saddle it.
Right.
And you're kind of pushing into it.
Correct.
And so you're grabbing your bow.
Guess what?
Thumbtacks were double-sided taped so you're grabbing your bow. Guess what?
Thumbtacks were double-sided taped on the front of my bow.
Oh my.
Didn't grab it anymore.
That's so intense.
Yeah.
And it worked.
It did.
Look, I'm not recommending people do that with their kids, but the also supplement to
our conversation, we're going to put a number of videos up on my YouTube page and we'll
link to Jake's YouTube page with Archery 101.
Both Archery Gear 101, just laying out the anatomy of a bow, and then
Technical 101. So you have a couple of pointers which you may not get
at some ranges so that when you have your first,
second, and subsequent lessons you'll have some really good
solid fundamentals at least to use.
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show.
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All right. So you mentioned Thumbtack Billy. I forgot his name. Harry, right?
All right. So you mentioned, uh, thumbtack Billy, I forgot his name, Harry, right?
And if I'm skipping any important chapters, let me know.
But I want to know when KSL entered your life and who or what is KSL.
Sure.
So quickly before we get into KSL, started shooting compound, the easier
sport to get into shot that for six years.
And then some other of the friends that I developed at the archery range that I
was going to, we're going to the empire state games.
It's like a mini Olympics and it's for all of the regions of within New York state.
And they compete against each other, different events.
You go to a place, there's opening ceremonies, closing ceremonies.
They have this for a bunch of sports.
It's amazing.
I wanted to do the archery thing, but compound wasn't in it.
Only recurve.
And I had really debilitating target panic, basically dealing with aiming in
the middle and the irrational fear to aim in the middle with the intention
of shooting the shot, which is quite common.
It's a common thing.
So I wanted to shoot recurve because it's a change, something different.
Archery was starting to become unfun for the compound side of things
because of that target panic.
So I picked up the recurve and it has a device called a clicker, which is
essentially a psycho trigger that is a, both a draw check to make sure your
draw length, the distance you pull the bow back is the same every single time.
But it also gives you a cue to tell you when to let go.
So it allowed me to aim in the middle with more comfort to disassociate from that fear of letting go.
Yeah.
So let me get people visual that might help you
imagine what a clicker is.
It's a flat piece of metal that goes
on the outside of the arrow.
I actually used one for the first time today.
And holy God, is it challenging to figure out.
But if you were to imagine, let's say
you're using a slingshot.
Most people know a slingshot. But let's say you're using a slingshot. Most people know a
slingshot, but let's say instead of shooting a ball bearing, you're shooting an arrow out of this
slingshot. And there's a piece of metal that is leaning against the arrow as you pull it back in
the slingshot. Once it flips past the very front of that arrow point, this is not the perfect analogy,
but it works and clicks onto another piece of metal.
That's when you let go, whether you think you're ready or not.
And what that's going to do is standardize how much you pull it back.
And it also takes away the decision to let go.
Yes, exactly.
It's just a Pavlovian response that you train in yourself.
Yes and no.
I mean, it's more complicated.
Yes, yes, but that is a brief look at it.
So I switched to recurve specifically
because of target panic and to go to the Empire State games.
So I literally took a bow off the wall,
I still have the bow, that was a club bow,
and took my stuff from my compound,
my arrows and all sorts of other things,
and threw it on the bow and started shooting it
for a few months before Empire State games, made the team. I think I won some medals there. I don't
remember exactly, but it was a lot of fun. Good time, very good experience and ultimately fell
in love with archery again because it was enjoyable again. So there was no target panic involved.
And just continued to do that. Shot up through the ranks, started winning nationals as a junior
that shot up through the ranks, started winning nationals as a junior.
And then at a tournament called the, well, actually it was junior world championships at U S target nationals.
I was shooting against some other people that had just moved to the training
center to work with KSL who we'll get to in a second, and I was the only person
to beat the person who was working with KSL. And he came up to me after the match and said,
hey, you're pretty good.
And I'd like you to come out to the training center
and work with the junior dream team.
It was a squad at the time that would go out there
maybe once a quarter.
And I said, actually, I just applied to become an RA,
a resident athlete.
I'd like to move out there full-time in a couple months.
And he said, great, I'll keep an eye out for your application
and keep it up. And he said, great, I'll keep an eye out for your application and keep it up.
And he disappeared.
And so KSL is Kisuk Lee, my coach, and he is the godfather of archery in Korea.
He essentially left Korea and went to Australia for a few years.
What did he do in Korea?
Oh, he was the national head coach of the Korean archery team and formulated the entire program
that is the current Korean archery training regiment to develop archers.
And to put it as a quick example as to the type of celebrity level that he is, anytime
we would fly to Korea, a limo would show up.
He didn't order it, but the limo would show up.
We flew there for a tournament and a limo showed up and he said, can't fit the team in the limo? No, thanks.
And I'm at a tournament in Puerto Rico. We're in a sauna, me and another archer with some other random Korean.
He looked Korean and he ended up being from Korea and he said, oh, why are you guys here? We're here shooting archery.
Oh, did you know archery is a national sport in Korea? Yeah, we do actually.
And our coach is actually Korean is Ki-sik Lee.
Ki-sik Lee.
Oh my God.
Do you have any idea like the level of celebrity and how important
he is to the country, like culturally, just random sauna in Puerto Rico, you
know, I don't know.
So that kind of level.
And so he left Korea, went to Australia, worked with them to
develop a national program.
I think before he was working with them officially, he went to
biomechanics school to try to apply more efficient movements
to his method.
And he also prior to that, to jump backwards, part of the
development of the Korean national program was looking at
the U S program back in the eighties, we were dominant
worldwide and hadn't lost a world championship for decades and we're just
powerhouses on the international scale.
And so he mimicked the program that we were doing, or at least the movements,
positions, that kind of thing, and implemented that in Korea as a national
system that would start from grassroots from day one, no matter what.
And then that's why we would be thrown out because we didn't fit the mold.
That's how strict they are.
So he went to Australia, made a better program, and then ultimately ended up coming to the States.
And so he just got hired in 2006 and like January.
So just before junior world championships, I moved out to the training center and
started training under Coach Lee in 2006.
Okay.
So we're going to pick up there in a minute, but I want to just pause because you're already
doing very, very well.
So you mentioned a few things that influenced that, right?
You found it appealing, easy to use archery as maybe an escape, right?
A meditation you made training as difficult as possible.
Do any other things come to mind that were decisions you made or things you did differently
that you think contributed to those successes prior to moving out to the training center?
One of those things honestly was I did not really mesh well socially with other kids.
And so I didn't really have a ton of friends. It was a very odd situation. Definitely a lot of it
is I'm an intense person as it is. And so I take things very seriously.
His wife is laughing from around the concrete pillar.
Yes. So, yeah, So I take things very seriously.
And as a kid that can make things difficult, even though, uh, talented
in sports, baseball, just any throwing sport really in archery and just didn't fit in in school.
So I basically built a shell around myself.
Didn't talk to anyone in school.
I didn't because I got made fun of and got it, you know, just overall,
not attacked because it wasn't physical. Really. It just wasn't something I was interested in. I
wasn't wanting to participate in social life. So I just made a shell around myself and stayed inside
of that in school and archery. I didn't have that identity. Right. I was a kid. Everybody's like
kind of shooting and doing their own thing. Yeah. Everybody's doing their own thing. Everybody's like kind of shooting and doing their own thing. Everybody's doing their own thing.
Everybody's as interesting and different and awkward and normal and
talented and just human.
Yeah.
Right.
And so I didn't have that aura of that negative experience of
school following me around.
So it supercharged my desire to want to do it more because it was just, I was
normal, people treated me like a normal human, a normal kid with respect.
It was great.
Right.
So that was ultimately my life.
I think that really is what supercharged my desire to want to do it more because
it was something that I felt happy doing.
Yeah, totally.
And I want to, this is as good a point as any to say that part of what got me excited about archery was realizing how welcoming the communities are.
And they're different personalities, right? It's like compound crews different from the Olympic crew, which is different from the bare boat crew, which is very different from the horse boat crew. They're all like different burning man camps
with super different personalities,
but broadly speaking, incredibly welcoming.
People are happy to give you advice,
give you pointers, help you out.
And I mean this in the best way possible.
It's also kind of like weirdo Palooza.
I mean, it's like, and it doesn't matter, right?
It's like, okay, like there's some dude in the kilt
Okay, whatever. And then there's like some emo chick with a mohawk. Yeah, okay, whatever and everybody's just doing their thing shooting and it's
Of course, that's not every archery
No, but in Brooklyn Gotham archery great spot you see everything and those people will be right next to a died-in-the-wool
Hunter who is born and raised in Montana who's getting ready for hunting season.
Yeah.
And everybody's cool.
Yep.
So that's, that's part of what I really have enjoyed about it.
All right.
So Austin powers fade back to KSL.
So you get to the training center and technically you're perfect.
And he's just like, let it rip, son.
Just move forth, be bold and prosper.
Or was there more to it?
Well, yeah.
So, uh, perspective is I moved out there, I believe in the end of August of 2016
world championships, junior world championships, the trials that I met him at.
It's the first and only junior worlds I'd ever go to.
And when we first moved there, we being other people, because I also had another
buddy of mine, Dan Schuller, who moved out there with me and my number one competitor
head to head since like 14 years old.
And we just kind of pushed each other and kept competing and moving up the
ladder as we got older and older.
So we both moved out to there at the training center at the same time.
And coach Lee said, I won't change your form at all.
Don't worry, train and compete through the world championships.
And then we'll work on your form because part of the reason of going to the
training center was to learn from coach Lee to really learn how to be a real
archer, because up until that point, my shot cycle, which is a thing that you do for archery,
it's the same method over and over again. It's like a, like a mantra, but physically,
it's like a physical recipe. Yes. Right. And it's just like someone who's, let's just say an Olympic
diver, right? They're like, they're going to have their routine never deviates. They're probably
telling off in the same way. They're putting things in the same place. Probably fold it the same and
put it in the same place on the railing.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
Because all of that genuinely matters at a high level, at least to the routine for sure.
And so for archery, my routine prior to that was pull back the bow, anchor, look at the
middle and wait for the clicker to click.
There was no activation.
There was no mental talk.
There was nothing.
It was genuinely pull it back, look at the middle and wait.
That's it.
And so when I was there, there was about that two month time period before junior worlds, and I started shooting phenomenal, like to the level of I could be easily
competitive top two, top three, and the senior division really starting to shoot
high level scores and frankly, to be a threat to actually medal at junior worlds.
So it's very exciting.
Yeah.
And then about two weeks or so before the actual event, before we went down to Mexico, everything changed.
Coach Lee just decided it's time to change your form and not just change my form, change my equipment, which is another part of it.
your form and not just change my form, change my equipment, which is another part of it. And so to not exaggerate in the least, the only thing that was the same on my entire setup and
in my entire shop process was my riser, the center part of the bow that's made of aluminum
that the limbs, the piece that Ben snapped into and the riser and my site bar, which is the thing that moves the site. So my site pin, my finger tab, my arrows, my fletchings, my string, my stabilizers,
my entire shot process, how I stood, how I thought, what I told myself,
everything had changed.
And my scores went from nationally competitive as a senior, a threat on the
world scale as a junior to genuinely not shooting that terrible
ever, ever.
Okay.
It was the worst you've been literally the worst I had ever shot even before I
picked up my recurve that for the very first time before going to the empire
state games.
So if I took my scores at empire state games,
I'd probably outshot my scores at junior worlds in Mexico.
Okay. Why would coach Lee do that two weeks
before the competition?
He's an interesting guy.
And his reason was I can't take an archer
that looks like that to world championships.
In his defense, my technique was atrocious,
a completely arched back and just what we would call a hollow back.
So standing very upright, you know, I'm a young kid at the time, just turned 18,
barely strength trained ever.
You know, I did some planks.
That was my strength training, right?
Yeah.
And yeah, just couldn't control my body and just didn't look the part.
You know, he is known for having very specific looks in his archers, a very
specific biomechanically efficient movement with very precise loading of the
structure of the body itself to maintain the weight of the bow.
And I was not doing that in the least.
I asked him afterwards and he said, I was embarrassed to bring those archers to
a junior world championships. And he was not afraid to say it.
Ultimately, I was there for the Olympic games, not for junior world championships.
So how could I ever say no, my ultimate goal is to make the games, not to do
anything at junior worlds, but it definitely had quite an effect on my
overall mental perspective of how things were going.
How long did it take you to build back up to the same scores or superior scores?
I would say probably three to four years.
Oh my God.
So what are you saying to yourself mentally over that period of time?
Cause I would imagine that would, could be incredibly demoralizing.
Yes.
And you would have, I would think, moments of doubt.
And I'm curious what kept you going
and how you kept yourself going during that period of time.
Because I mean, look, I think I'm a glutton for punishment
and have pretty good pain tolerance, physical and mental.
But I don't know if I could do that.
To put it in context. So it took me three to four years to get back to zero square one.
Whereas my buddy Dan Schuller, three months. Oh, wow.
Maybe, maybe less. Yeah. So I don't know why, but maybe three months or so for him.
So I see somebody who went out to the training center with me at the same time.
I was at the same level, if not potentially a
little bit better, at least the way I saw it.
Then him and then extend my timeline times 15
times that's how long it took me much longer to
take me to get back to zero.
And so, yeah, it was definitely very difficult
mentally and emotionally for sure, because it was more than challenging to say the least, and not only that
adding in physical challenges too, because prior to moving to the training center,
I was maybe shooting maybe a hundred, 120 arrows at the most I could ever
shoot in a single day.
And I would maybe shoot that once a month.
I would shoot often, don't get me wrong, but maybe it would be 50 to
60 arrows a session at the most. Yep.
And I thought I was doing a lot and never strength training. I went to the gym at school and did planks and I don't even know what some
very basics, maybe wall sits or something like that, like really just not strength
training.
So we've out of the training center, started shooting upwards of four to
500 arrows every single day.
Strength training three days a week on the track, doing morning workouts, six days a week and shooting overall six
days a week.
So super crazy amounts of load, develop tendonitis, tendinosis and shoulders and
dealing with all sorts of inflammation issues.
Still deal with a little bit of that today.
And I have learned a lot of things to deal with that.
But at that time I'm going to the sports
medicine for hours a day.
So I do pre-hab rehab exercises every single day.
And I'm the only one complaining of the pain in my shoulders and all sorts of other
things, whereas all my other teammates are shooting just as much, if not more arrows
than me with just as much, if not more draw weight, going to the gym, doing all the same
things and none of them had to go to sports medicine.
Very few of them were even sore enough to feel like they needed to ice or do anything.
And I'm there having to do all sorts of different things.
It was a big, big struggle and a challenge.
And I don't know really what pushed me through exactly.
I can't really put my finger on the pulse of that, but I think a lot of it actually
have to attribute to my sister, Liz.
She was approaching things with a different mindset than pretty much that
I have ever heard of in the past, trying to like manifest things instead of just
going through the motions instead of just doing it and hoping the outcome changes.
But to try to just overall bring what you want into fruition and to not
just hope that it's going to happen.
And so a big part of that was actually using affirmations and I had no idea
what they were at the time, but she started bringing me into that mindset
of using positive affirmations to kind of change everything.
You know, I was dealing with being on depression medication and all sorts of
other things, because if I had to pick one word to describe to you how I felt during that timeframe, it was apathy.
Yeah.
Just the lack of anything.
And so fast forward to the positive affirmations using I am period.
So we check our hand placement and our grip every single shot to make
sure it's exactly the same thing.
He has, I am tattooed on basically,
let's just say the back of the hand,
the webbing between the index finger and the thumb
on the left hand, which you're gonna check every time.
Correct, because that's my bow hand.
I want to make sure my bow hand placement
is precise in the grip.
And so it's not just I am, it's I am period.
It's a statement, right?
And so what is I am?
I am is whatever you want to be.
So for me, it was, I am an archer. I'm an Olympian period. So changing my overall habits
and mindset started with just self-talk.
And would you do that at basically that point in your shot cycle?
Yeah. It's like trying to, when you're shooting an arrow, there's a difference between trying
to hit the 10 ring and trying to not miss the 10 ring.
There's also a difference between fighting for position and owning a position.
And so ultimately how is your approach?
And so if you approach from the stance of it has happened and you are, you are that
person, then your
habits just change.
And so genuinely it was like, I am an Olympian period.
Okay.
I'm not yet, I'm not using the standard thing when I ask people.
So what do you want to be?
I want to be an Olympian.
Okay, great.
You're going to always want to be one.
Let's change that thought to be, I am an Olympian because then your habits change.
And so my habits changed to be more of a, an approach of looking at myself from an
honest perspective of am I doing the right thing?
Am I getting enough sleep?
Am I strength training enough?
Am I putting in enough effort?
Am I being honest with myself?
All of those things, because if a champion would do whatever it was and I wasn't doing
it, I changed that I made a decision to make that change.
I think a lot of it that took me out of that spiral, that negative
spiral was just believing.
And using the present tense affirmations, positive affirmations,
never a future tense, because the future tense is just, you're just setting
yourself up to continue to want that.
It's not done.
If it's done and you shoot from that position of I have arrived, I am that I
am what I want to be, then everything else can click.
And for people listening, this is not the first time that affirmations have
come up on this podcast with people who are top performers.
It can be a really powerful tool.
And to this day, I mean, I'm still kind of like
chasing the dream here, but my best ever day of shooting was a day early on when I started using
affirmations. And for me, it was, I am a top Lancaster competitor, right? And it was every
single shot. And we'll talk about practice scores versus competition scores at some point.
But it is remarkable what that can contribute to,
like what it can do.
All right, so you're rebuilding,
rebuilding three to four years, good God.
I mean, it's an entire college experience, basically.
Talk about brutal.
But you've made all of these decisions,
you've had all this training. You've
got coach Lee's input. You have the positive affirmations. You've developed, maybe fine-tuned
your shot sequence, right? You're no longer just staring at the middle of the target and
waiting until the clicker clicks. When does it all come together?
Ultimately, it really came together in 2012 at the Olympic Games in London.
So put it in perspective, as we talked about Korea already, Korea's a powerhouse.
Now what the U S was in the eighties Korea is today, just dominant
for decades at this point.
Yeah.
So just put that in perspective.
Like if we take, could be the, the women's team or the men's team, like how dominant
if you look at their metal record
over time, what does it look like? With the exception of the Korean men,
the Korean women haven't lost a gold medal individual or team round. And I think like
28 years or something crazy. I don't know exactly. It's an absurd. I mean, it is as impeccable record
as a country can possibly have.
Correct.
The only reason that I say with the Korean men as an exception is because they
didn't have an individual male Olympic gold medal for quite some time.
They just recently got one finally.
Why is that?
I don't know.
Yeah.
Um, maybe the pressure.
Yeah.
I don't know.
There's a lot riding on it.
There's also a lot of benefit for them to perform well, but there's a lot of
pressure.
Well, I would also for sure. I didn't really think about this because I guess on
one end you could say, well, wait a second,
they've been shooting 700 hours a day since they were a fetus.
Why can't they handle the pressure? But at the same time, you told me,
I can't remember who it was. You don't need to mention them,
but what did someone say to you to calm you down before one competition? I can cue you
Do you remember what I'm talking about? Yeah, what is it? Yeah, no one gives a shit
Meaning in the u.s. About meaning I'm not LeBron. Yeah, I'm not Kobe. I'm not Michael right right no one's watching
No one cares right so yeah relax take some pressure off yourself. I believe he actually said no one cares
so in contrast, right, if you're a top Olympic competitor in Korea, you are LeBron, you are
Kobe, everyone cares and everyone is watching.
So it's a tremendous amount of pressure.
Oh, for sure.
Yeah.
It's a lot of pressure no matter what.
Okay.
So 2012.
So 2012, the Korean men then because of the team.
So we're leading into the team rounds because that's where we're heading here.
And how does that work?
Is it like the cumulative points of three people who go round robin?
So we do round robins head to head, single elimination for elimination.
We do that individually.
We also do that as a team.
So you seed yourself in the ranking round.
There's 64 men competing one through 64, one versus 64, two versus 63 and so on.
Right.
So you decide the individual, correct.
That's how you decide the individual champion team round.
It's your three archers combined score that ranks you as a team amongst the other
teams.
And then it's, there was 12 teams at the time.
And so you then same thing, just like the, uh, March madness style bracket.
It's single elimination and head to head.
And so you shoot three archers together as a team, you shoot in rotation.
So you step on and off the line and you have a very limited
amount of time to shoot your arrows.
So there's no time to second guess, no time to let down.
And you have to be a well oiled machine to execute properly.
Yeah.
Let me just say, so let down for people who may not get that.
If you pull back and you make a mistake or you didn't set up properly, doesn't
feel right, you can choose if you're practicing, let's just say to let down,
which means slowly bring the string back to the bow and start over.
You essentially abort the shot.
Yeah.
You pull back.
You're like, eh, something doesn't feel right. Right. The wind's blowing harder. I had a negative thought, which is what I had to do over and start over. You essentially abort the shot. You pull back, you're like, something doesn't feel right. The wind's blowing harder. I had a negative thought.
Which is what I had to do over and over again today because I overdrew and clicked the clicker
when I was not prepared to release the shot. So not having any wiggle room.
No wiggle room. There's just really no time to second guess and you just have to go for it. So
There's just really no time to second guess and you just have to go for it. So after the ranking round, Korea was ranked first and the United States was ranked either
third or fourth.
So that means that we would meet in the semi-finals.
And so that meant whoever won the semi-finals would go for gold and then the loser of that
match would have silver.
And then the loser of the semi-ifinal match would have the chance to
win bronze in the next match.
And so we were seated to meet Korea in the semifinals.
And so the first question that we got asked as a team and the coach included
coach Lee was, so how does it feel to be shooting for bronze tomorrow?
That's just the assumption.
That is the assumption.
That's such a dick question.
Yeah.
So like, I don't even know who the actual media outlet was, but it's like, so how
does it feel to be shooting for bronze?
It's like, have you been watching at all?
We are at the U S men at that time.
We're ranked number one in the world as team as a team round, because we were
winning world cup events, which are world ranking events leading up to that
and doing quite well.
The Koreans were ranked second in the world and we had beat them several times on the World Cup scale. But of course, everybody's just assuming that they're going to be dominant because they
had won for the last, I don't know, decade straight or more. And so it was an interesting
wake-up call all of a sudden to be like, what? Can you ask that question again?
So it was just a shock to say the least, but the power of positive affirmations, by
that time I started changing my thought process and talking, not just I am an
Olympian period, it became much more powerful and actionable and timely.
So tying smart goals into positive affirmations
of I am an Olympian or I am 2012 Olympic champion
because I run my mental program more than any
other Archer period.
So it's not just, I am not just, I am an Olympian.
I am an Olympian at the specific time at this
specific event for this specific reason.
And that specific reason is something that I've identified as a absolute
crucial thing to do every single shot in order to succeed.
That's how I ended up talking to myself at that timeframe, to that level of detail.
So of course, whatever our response to the media was at that time, I'm not exactly sure.
What did Coach Lee say?
Well, we had a lot of opportunity to talk to a lot of media leading up to the event.
So we get to London 15 days before the start of
the competition, where they're training and
media's there asking us questions during
sessions that we book.
And so the Korean media was coming in, asking
Coach Lee questions about basically the same
kind of thing.
How does it feel to win silver before we haven't
even shot an arrow yet, essentially.
And he's, he started saying things in Korean responding to them as their
questions were in Korean as well.
And you could just see the shock of this reporter's face, right?
And even the cameraman's like, just this response.
And so after the media left, we asked coach Lee, so what did you say to them?
He said, let's just put it this way.
I don't think I'm going to be welcome back in Korea.
So I don't know what he said.
He didn't really fill in the details there, but the idea was essentially that the power
that we had as a team of the confidence, not just the archers individually, the
archers as a team, because we were really the first and only team to compete as a team in that tournament.
So normally it's individual.
It's an individual sport.
That's what it is.
That's what the prestige is.
And you happen to have three individuals that come together to compete as a team,
but they're just still shooting as individuals.
If somebody shoots say worse than the others, it's easy to kind of point fingers and
be like, that's the reason why we didn't win because it's an individual sport. It's like,
we're a team. We win as a team, we lose as a team. And so we had that genuine change. Our main focus
was team rounds. It was not individual, the three of us, because there's 12 other teams and there's
64 other individuals. You only have to win three matches to be in the medals and team rounds, whereas you have to win
five or six matches to be in an individual medal.
And so statistically much easier to medal as a
team than as an individual.
So we genuinely trained every day.
Once we selected the team leading up to that event
as a team, encouraging each other, learning each
other's shot, not just learning each other's shot,
but during this head to head match play, there's no time for equipment failures.
So if your equipment breaks, you can't go fix it.
So usually you have a backup bow and the backup bow is just there and it's kind
of working, you do your best to make it as good as your primary bow, but it's
your backup bow for a reason.
It's just doesn't shoot as well for whatever reason. And coach Lee basically said backup bows are pointless because
if your main bow breaks, you're mentally just going to be shot. So what's the point? Don't even
bother setting up a backup bow. And so we actually shot each other's primary bows as our backup.
So I shot Brady's bow and I shot Jacob Wookie's. But hold on a second. Yeah. So how similar are your draw lengths and like your Ape index,
right? In terms of like, not at all, but the thing is I'm using indexes anyway. Yeah. You guys can
look it up, but it's just like the, your, your physical proportions are not the same. And at
that level, certainly everything is everything customized for sure. Not just that the balance
of the bow, the feel of the grip, the sight pin, all of those things.
And so the thing that is constant is our arrows.
So we use our same arrow and our clickers, the
device that's a draw check is, was roughly in the
same place.
Yep.
I think the only exception was one of us and Brady
chose to not even bother with a clicker when he
was shooting one of our bows as a backup.
He would just pull back, control the shot and execute good shots and deal with that.
Yep.
Whereas I used their clickers and essentially I learned that I think Brady's bow, maybe I hit low eight.
So about eight, 10 inches low at 70 meters.
So I would just aim high eight with his bow and Jacob Wookie's I'd have to aim like low right blue or something crazy to actually have the arrow land in the middle.
So we just, you know, played this game, right?
And so it was, you know, just this level of intimacy per se as a team that no one else
had in the world because they all trained as individuals, not as a team.
So quick couple of questions then, because I guess to even me listening, I'm like, well,
it's still kind of an individual
thing. I used to wrestle way back in the day and it's like, okay, yeah, you're a team and
you want to be supportive. The backup bow using someone else's primary as your backup
is super interesting. This is the first time I'm hearing of it. Are there any other strategies
where let's just say I'm making this up, but okay, it's like the wind is gusting and the
first person up is going to have to deal with the brunt of it. You think so you pick the person who seems to be best in high winds. I'm making that up. I have no idea. But are, is there any other strategy that you can build around the team?
For us, the wind is actually was part of it.
We'll get to that in a second.
But if you approach team rounds as an individual, you're working on your own shot and that's it.
So you, you either shoot a 10 or you don't.
And your teammate who's also your opponent and individuals
either shoots a 10 or he doesn't.
And that's just how it normally works.
But what we did was we worked with each other to understand a little bit more
about each other's shot cycle, each other's mental approach, what makes someone better than doesn't.
Like, do you want to hear your name when you're at full draw?
Like, come on, Tim, shoot a 10.
Or do you want just, all right, strong shot, something that's general,
but not specific to you.
And so there's little things that you learn, but then also there's a
supreme trust in each other.
And so in team rounds, you have to communicate with each other,
how the shot went.
And then ultimately where did the arrow go compared to how the shot went.
And then the next shooter makes adjustments based on that because
the wind is always changing.
I see.
Right.
So each person is a feedback mechanism for everyone else.
Exactly.
And also the coaches too, because he has this third person view.
He's not shooting, but he's able to look at stuff, the wind blowing in different
areas and actually the very specific thing that coach Lee did with the wind
that we couldn't as archers because of a piece of clothing choice that he made
different than us at that day, the day being when we shot for metals.
If we just fast forward to the actual medal rounds, we are in the
semi-final match against Korea.
We almost lose our first match.
We're very close to actually losing and just barely squeaked by by a point or two.
And, um, but there was no doubt that we were ever going to lose, at least in my head.
I had no fear of that.
I was so supremely confident because of this
affirmation, the power of it, that there was
never a doubt, even when we were behind in the
match, it just was like, it's supposed to happen
this way, apparently, you know?
And once we got to the semi-final against Korea,
everybody said that was the gold medal match of
the games actually, because everybody wanted to
see that Korea was powerhouse.
US is ranked number one.
It's the Olympic games.
What's going to happen?
Everybody's watching.
We actually had, I think the highest viewership of any Olympic sport at
the 2012 Olympics during that match.
That's wild.
They put us on TV because we were the first medal of the US, our first chance
to get a medal and, you know, back then it was Twitter and I had comments saying,
I love my sports team, whatever
it is, the Sabres or the Buffalo Bills or whatever.
You know, people from my hometown and they're like,
I have never stood on my couch and screamed at the
TV, but I did when I saw archery at the Olympics.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
So cool stuff.
So the wind, we usually, we have a wind sock.
The wind sock is not a calibrated windsock.
So meaning if it's at a certain angle, it's a certain speed. We don't do that in archery for
whatever reason, but it's always at 50 meters. So the distance we shoot is 70. The flag is, you know,
three fifths of the way down range or so. And it's always on a specific pole at a specific height.
And you have, you know, every so often they're placed.
And so you have a general consistent reference as to what the windsock's
doing and how you can guess where to aim.
And that's ultimately as best as you can do as guess.
And so we were shooting at Lord's cricket ground and on the pitch where
they bowl the ball back and forth to each other, the people who stand on
that, the lawn care people,
are anointed by the queen to be allowed to stand
on the hollowed ground.
The lawn mower is anointed by the queen
to be allowed to mow her grass.
But because our windsock and the stand
that held that windsock was not anointed by the queen
or whatever they call it, it was not allowed to be there.
So they put it in a different location
than it ever had been at any other event. So they put it in a different location that it ever had been
at any other event. We're also shooting in a stadium. Within the stadium is another stadium
inside of that stadium where the archery fans are sitting. And the stands go down probably 50 meters.
There's several thousands of people in the stands and it kind of fans out towards the target. And so we're guessing we're genuinely guessing where to aim.
Ultimately, before that match, Coach Lee was like, trust me.
I know where you need to aim.
Okay.
You're not shooting.
How do you know I'm the lead off?
Jacob Wiggey shoots second, Brady Ellison shoots third, and I have to do my job
when I lead off to shoot a supremely confident shot.
Clean shots.
So you can depend on, so you can use that to calibrate for everybody else.
Correct.
Or be so in tune with my shot.
When I make an error, I know, or can essentially estimate where that arrow
should land and then compare where it actually lands to where it should land.
And then suggest to Jacob Wookiee where to aim.
So to give you an idea as a quick sidetrack, when I let go of the string at 70 meters,
I can tell you within the size of about a baseball where that arrow is going on the
target the moment I let it go.
Because I've shot so many arrows, I verified where it went on the target, looking through
a spotting scope and attributed my feeling of how the shot went to where it landed.
And so I can just tell you exactly where it's going to go.
And so that's my job as lead off.
Coach Lee's wearing shorts.
We're wearing pants.
He can feel the wind blowing on his leg hairs and he's like, aim left nine.
Okay.
And so, yeah, so good luck finding any other team that has ever
worked that closely together.
We ultimately ended up winning and then went on to lose the gold medal match by
a fraction of an inch at 70 meters away.
But I mean, ultimately everyone came up to us afterwards and said, that was
the gold medal match, regardless of how the actual medals end.
So supreme confidence in that positive statements, those positive affirmations of just supreme faith and belief in the process as it's happening, even if it's
not going well, like our first match when we were losing, we were behind in the
first several ends of the match and the matches are only four ends.
So an end is somebody getting up and shooting a group of arrows.
Correct.
So as a team, that would be each Archer shoots two arrows. So that's a total of six arrows. That's an end is somebody getting up and shooting a group of arrows. Correct. So as a team, that would be each archer shoots two arrows.
So that's a total of six arrows. That's an end.
And then a cumulative score at that time was shot.
So whoever had the highest score of 24 arrows after four ends,
cause that's the total amount shot that team won and advanced in the match.
That's an incredible story. That's crazy. I've never heard a bunch of these.
This is wild. I can all the time we spent together.
It's not just for comedic relief because you mentioned the Korean
media interviews and them looking shocked talking to coach Lee.
So I'll just share a sidebar on coach Lee.
I've had a little bit of interaction.
So flew to San Diego because we did a little bit of training together and I wanted to
meet this famous coach Lee. Why not? And so I made the introduction and said, Hey Coach Lee, Tim would like to work
with you. Yeah. And so LA and San Diego and a few things that are, I think fun to share. So the first
is we meet at this outdoor range and I'm going to be shooting mostly at 20 yards, so 60 feet. Let's just call it roughly. And we hang out for 45 minutes.
I'm taking copious notes.
He's giving me some pointers and then we stopped and he's like, okay, I think you
have plenty to work with and I don't think you need my help anymore.
And I was like, uh, excited, flown down, planning to be there for a week or
something, five days, something along those lines flowing down planning to be there for a week or something, five days,
something along those lines, not just to be there for five days,
but to be there explicitly to train with them. And so at some point I'm like a
bit crest fallen. I'm like, Oh man, let my head hang like Eeyore.
I'm like, Oh fuck, I do feel like I need more help.
And we start talking about somehow we get talking about
firearms and guns and he is very interested in marksmanship
and all things firearms.
And so he gets more excited and we're chatting,
we're talking about this, that and the other thing.
And then he asks me, so what brings you to San Diego?
And I was like, well,
maybe this sounds strange, but I flew here to train with you. And he's like, oh, okay, tonight's
Korean barbecue. So we go out to dinner and end up having an amazing time training with him. And
he's really one of a kind. And also the reason I was mentioning the shocked look on the faces of the Korean media is you
do not worry about Coach Lee speaking his mind.
Oh no, so direct.
You do not have to worry about him sure coding things.
And to give you an example, later I ended up driving to his house behind which he has
all these targets set up.
And basically, I was the only non-Asian there.
Absolutely, 100% the only non-Asian there, which is fine.
It was just a Korean army and tons of Korean kids, also some like Taiwanese kids and Chinese
kids, but they're all 12 years old.
And shooting by my standards, especially at that point, incredibly well.
And I'm off in the corner, like getting some pointers from Coach Lee and just looking like
a total remedial case, which is fine.
And then at one point he wants to give like a pep talk to the kids and he's like, Tim,
Tim, come over here.
Okay.
And so we all stand in a circle and he's giving this very Coach Lee motivational talk, which is like 60% inspiration, 40% you need to shape
up or ship out toughen up kids.
And at one point, someone or why I'm in this circle and he points to me and he's like,
he's like, look, this is Tim and he is an old man, a very old man and he's here training seriously. And I was like, Oh, I see if I can be a inspirational slash like warning tale for these, these amazing
young children with so much promise.
I'm in, I'm in for it.
I'm in for it.
But it's just so endearing and the guy's genius.
He's really one of a kind.
Okay.
So those are my coach stories.
Thank you, Coach Lee.
Let's talk about your coaching and what we ended up doing
and all the experiments along the way,
because you mentioned, for instance,
Coach Lee's feeling the leg hair and the movement
and you're providing feedback.
You're getting familiar with one another's shot cycles.
The little things matter.
It is hard for me to explain verbally just how many tiny,
tiny, tiny details make a huge difference with archery.
And just the way you hook your fingers on the string,
the exact placement, how far it is from the fold
of one joint, the amount of curl of the fingers,
how much you use your, you're using in this case, index, middle and ring finger,
the degree to which you can see or not see as a coach, my nail on my ring finger and the difference
that makes the angle of the back of the hand and the difference that makes the angle of the back of the hand
and the difference that makes the level of detail is really unbelievable when you want
to start training and performing with precision.
Okay.
So I find you, we meet up and then ultimately about six months out from Lancaster decide
to take it seriously.
Now there are a few constraints, right? One is you live in Florida.
I do not live in Florida.
So we have limited in person training, although I think we did a good job with
that. What would you say maybe on average was it's like a few days a month or like
a week every six weeks, something like that.
Probably somewhere in that timeframe.
But we, I think I was maybe there for three to four days once every six weeks.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we're doing a lot of virtual training.
I travel a lot.
So if there are awards for most varied training environments, I think I would
win that one hands down for sure.
In the bare bow division, in the barebow division.
In the barebow.
Absolutely.
The only exception would be like your professional archer who is traveling the world competing.
Yeah.
But that's the only exception.
And then there's no one doing that in barebow.
Yeah.
I mean, I was not even remotely.
So I ended up bringing my roller bag, which looks like it's carrying an assault rifle
customs do not love this bag.
Like sir, what's in the bag?
That's sporting a gear.
Sporting gear is the answer.
Uh-huh.
That's how you get your bow and arrow through customs.
But I traveled all over the place, all over the country in the US, certainly.
And I would check my targets and often it's just a big cube of foam.
And they'd be like, sir, what's in the box?
And I'm like, there's nothing in the box.
And they'd be like, sir, need you to be serious right now.
What's in the cube?
I'm like, it's solid foam.
And they're like, yeah, but what's inside it?
I'm like, foam.
This would go on and on and on.
And, you know, going to Hawaii, going to Canada, going to the UK where I ended up going on this pilgrimage
trail, Cotswolds Way, and at every tiny inn I would have to negotiate, try to pitch my
little heart out to shoot in the backyard or anywhere.
I ended up shooting from inside a hotel to outside the hotel.
I ended up shooting from outside a hotel through the living room, through the kitchen,
into a laundry room or ahead of target.
Pickleball courts.
Pickleball courts.
Tennis courts.
Tennis courts.
Batting cages.
Batting cages, right, where you have kids whacking balls
with aluminum bats and screeching and hooding and hollering.
Eight feet from you.
Eight feet from you.
So if you want distraction training,
that's a great way to do it. So we had some things to work around, but the
forcing function was for me, and this is always the case, the magic of a deadline and having
a competition on the books, which I wasn't a hundred percent committed to, but I was
like, let me behave as if, let me train as if I'm going to compete. It's like, I don't want to embarrass myself. I don't want to embarrass you.
Let's see how it goes.
But I remember probably a few months out like paying the registration fee and I'm
like, okay, now my name is online for everybody to see.
That probably means I should go. And then the question is, all right,
what do you do if you have six months to train?
And few things come to mind immediately.
Number one is you're always going to have things to work around.
So it could be logistics, could be in my case, my left shoulder, which was reconstructed
in 2004 and it was a real limiter, had many different physiological limiters.
Right now I have a bunch of torn extensors.
I mean, they're probably going to require surgery in my right elbow, yada, yada, yada, yada, yada. It's
like, okay, well, we will have to just work around it. And lo and behold, you can work
around it. You might have to make some compromises. Okay, fine. But it's like if, for instance,
as we experienced, if shooting with a particular stance causes my back to seize up and it's
producing a lot of incredible pain.
Okay, well, make a few compromises on that in order to minimize that.
And then that's going to trigger a whole chain of other adaptations that we need to
make.
And like you, I guess, as a kid, I very quickly found it meditative.
Archery was almost like taking a break from my monkey mind.
And particularly when you start to focus on, and this is something we focused on pretty
early, I want to give Joel Turner again credit shot IQ in terms of like the boot up sequence
and blueprinting your best shots, really having a script for your checklist, like your pre-flight
checklist as you're going through your entire shooting motion and having, for instance,
positive affirmation.
Where do you put that?
You want to put it in the same place every single time.
And then I would say also recognizing that given some of the physical limitations,
it's like, okay, I can't do 500 hours a day.
Forget it.
We started at 60 something arrows a limited day, I think.
Oh, max.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was the absolute max.
Yep.
And a lot of that had to do with, you know, very typical Tim Ferriss fashion, as I
know now to overdo everything. Yeah, I was 11 out of four.
Yeah, I was basically doing like a Mr. Olympia pose down every time I was trying to shoot
the arrow.
So there was a lot more tension in the system than was necessary.
Which is, I just in fairness, my own defense, really common, go to a range and watch especially
guys who have a little bit of muscle shooting
these things.
And it's like, Whoa, okay.
This guy's like trying to Hulk his own shirt off.
But for you, the challenge was you had actual injuries, actual limitations.
So how much were those affecting the system versus the excessive tension?
And it was this back and forth juggling to figure out what was what was the cause.
Yeah, so there's a lot of detective work.
And for instance, in the left shoulder,
you have two titanium screws,
had the whole arm ripped out doing some combat sports stuff
a million years ago,
and my arm ended up sticking out of my chest basically.
And I won't get into all the gory details,
but suffice to say, when you tack down the shoulder
with these screws, you create some limitations.
And as a consequence of that, I had a lot of tendinosis
in rotator cuff muscles, infraspinatus, superspinatus.
They're a mess, really, really tangled up.
So what that means is like, okay, how do we work around this
rather than do I need to stop?
I mean, look, there are times when you need to stop.
Like right now with this elbow that requires surgery
I'm probably gonna have to take a break from the hard stuff for a little while two to three months, but
outside of that, it's like, okay, how do we work around this and
That took a bunch of different forms including like rather than trying to whack out
We ultimately got to the point when we were training in person at least that we were doing
What 200 plus arrows on some days? Yeah, and
point when we were training in person, at least that we were doing what 200 plus arrows on some days. Yeah. And there were many aspects to that.
And then we can talk about some of the technical stuff,
but just from the physical work around perspective,
when I started practicing, there were a few things that I would do.
And all of this we talked about and I was building off of your advice.
So rather than doing one session, break it into two sessions.
And also start and end your sessions
with blank bail practice.
Do you want to explain what blank bail is?
Because this avoids the target panic
that you mentioned earlier.
And I think is an incredible tool
that I found very, very helpful.
What is blank bail practice?
So blank bail is, so the bail, the target bail is blank.
There's no target face on it, nothing to aim at, not even a spot, a shadow,
a hole or whatever you can do small amounts of aiming per se, but it is not.
For the sake of precision, it's not trying to hit the 10 ring or anything like that.
What it does is it removes the aiming requirement or the aiming distraction from the process.
And when you were at the high level using blank bail practice,
how far away from the target do you stand?
Generally speaking for blank bail, I would be eight feet or so from the target.
So you're never going to miss. And so you're just simply going through repetition. It's like a palette cleanser almost.
So you go through your motions, you go through your shop process,
but you're not aiming at anything.
So you can confidently move through the movements without being
careful or over analytical or get yourself in a bind that can happen
when you're aiming at a target.
So it allows you to ingrain your technique to a level that really
trains the subconscious brain to try to take over the target and bind that can happen when you're aiming at a target. So it allows you to ingrain your technique to a level
that really trains the subconscious brain to try to
take over when you're in pressure situations.
And it also allows you to put in a lot more
repetition without so much time spent walking the
distance to go down to the target.
So for me, going down to 70 meters takes a bit of
time to walk that distance.
So instead I can just walk eight feet, pull my arrows and pick up my bow and
immediately start shooting again.
So that's what it meant to me.
And the amount of training at blank bail really depends on what you're
working on at that time.
But generally speaking, more is better because it really allows you to focus on
the process and ingrain your steps.
You know, you talked about the level of detail with just the hook alone to be
able to ingrain that to be automated to where you grab the string and you don't
even have to think about it.
You have to put in the reps.
And so if you're putting in the reps and you're distracted by aiming, it can take
away your focus on that grip on that hook or whatever it may be.
Exactly.
So I could use it for warming up in the beginning of a session, let's say the beginning
of the first session. And then towards the end, I'd be like, okay, look, I got as anyone competitive
as likely to do overly fixated on the scoring and the aiming, the performance, let me end on a good
rep. And so ending the training practices with blank bail just allowed me to settle
the snow globe a bit, focus on the biomechanics, particularly something, I mean, at least I
took this approach in the training session. If I notice, Oh, you know what? I am collapsing
a little bit, meaning losing back tension in the following way, A, B, or C is happening, or maybe I'm
not pulling my bow hand pinky back enough and therefore I'm landing right or whatever.
I'm just going to focus on that for my blank bill. That's going to be my most important
cue, particularly in the beginning, because if you try to incorporate too much too quickly,
you're going to get the Mac ball of death beach ball, right?
You're not going to be able to divide your attention and maintain any type of performance
in the beginning.
So a lot of what I found so valuable with your coaching was the layering.
When do you choose to introduce certain things?
And I also really liked the focus on biomechanics. So the blank
bill you can think of in a way as if let's just say you're I don't even know if they
do this but I'm making it up. Let's just say you're a major league pitcher and it's like,
all right, you're trying to focus on some aspect of your throw without the distraction
of trying to put it right into the sweet spot of a catcher's
net then let's just say you had a very very large net hanging it's like 20 feet
just hanging down and you were just throwing the ball into this net and
working on the biomechanics it would be similar to like dry fire training with a
pistol yeah yeah exactly yeah very similar yeah similar to dry firing which
you should never do with a bow. We talked about that in our video.
Unless you want your boat to explode. Literally don't do that.
And I'm trying to think in the early stages, what,
because it was a detective process and you know,
my mind is a little unusual at times and I process things a little differently.
So do you recall like what some of the early, most important things were that
we focused on in training?
A lot of them were conceptual things, not necessarily technical, physical,
but thought process.
How does the shot go?
What should you be trying to achieve kind of things?
So a lot of those are really setting up kind of the process of how to shoot a
bow, not necessarily how to shoot tens with a bow.
Yep.
So how to shoot tens of the bow comes later, I think.
I don't, I'm not sure about that, but.
Yeah.
Intense for just if, if people are getting distracted, just
think about shooting both sides.
Yeah, exactly.
So not how to put it in the middle, how to shoot a good shot.
Right.
And so there are some really key factors that are super important to
actually shooting a good shot.
One of those is follow through.
It's a very simple thing to explain.
If you think of somebody, say throwing a ball or kicking a ball, the moment of
contact of the foot hitting the ball, when you kick the ball is when you let go
of the string for shooting archery, or when you let go of the baseball, when you're throwing it, that's is when you let go of the string for shooting archery or when you let go of the baseball,
when you're throwing it,
that's the moment you let go of the string and shooting archery.
And so follow through is what happens after that motion.
No one ever in any other sport,
including baseball and soccer stop their motion of their foot or their arm.
The moment they let go of the object or make contact with it,
just doesn't happen. Same thing with golf, right?
So the stuff happens afterwards.
That's a follow-through motion.
That is a maintaining of your, in archery, we call it tension and direction.
You maintain that through follow-through.
So tension and direction being pulled back the bow, it's wanting to collapse you.
So you have to build tension against the bow, the system and whatever direction that is going back with the string hand and forward with the bow
hand, that tension and direction has to maintain exactly how it is when you're
at full draw through the release until the follow through finishes.
So that would be the principle of like tension and direction
and just follow through in general.
It's a very simple concept to imagine, but it's quite difficult to kind of implement.
So we worked a lot on the technical aspects of how to apply that physically
throughout the months or years.
We've been working together for a couple of years now, but really that last six
months leading up to Lancaster trying to hone that in to be fluid. One motion, not fake, not two points.
So not letting go of the string, losing all that tension of the string hand,
and then faking a follow through motion.
So it's like, for those that are watching the motion would look something similar
as, so the hand touching the face at anchor, the fingers opening, the arm not
moving, and then moving back in a second motion.
So a good follow through would be the same fluid backward motion of the elbow,
the same exact time that the fingers are pushed out of the way of the string.
And then that tension just continues until you run out of range of motion with the shoulder.
Yeah. I mean, imagine just for a visual for folks,
if you had like a Thera band or a giant rubber band
and you got into an archery position
and you're holding that rubber band at max tension,
the way that it would simulate
holding the string of a bow.
And then you closed your eyes and somebody walked up
and just cut the rubber band.
Correct. What would happen?
And the arms kept going, obviously.
You didn't expect it.
And that would be what you then have to do
consciously on some level it should take care of itself if you're using the proper thought process
and proper tension in the back and on the arm but even if the tension is improper in the back or
the arm the follow-through will happen if you have that concept of maintaining whatever tension it is
right or wrong when you're at full draw, but you continue through, through release.
Well, and this also relates to the inner monologue, right? So when you're at anchor,
okay, so you've got your, the strings fully pulled back again for people listening or not familiar
with archery, your hand is glued to your face or under the jaw in the case of Olympic archery.
Okay. Now at this point, what are you saying to yourself or what do you sometimes say to yourself?
For me?
Yeah.
There's a lot of different options, but basically just continued motion.
Yeah.
Continue the back shoulder moving around and behind me and the bow moving forward.
Yeah.
Or like finish the shot.
Correct.
Or finish the shot.
So one of the things that I talked to Coach Lee about somewhat recently when I had dinner
with him about a year and a half ago or so was so anything new to share.
And while he chuckled first, and then his response was, you're not going to like
this or others won't like this actually.
And he said, um, release is not a step anymore.
We do not release the string.
And I said, tell me more.
He said, well, if you follow through and your main primary focus, when you are at full draw, before you let go of the string is to follow through correctly, the release will take care of itself.
If you maintain and execute a good proper follow through, your release is good.
But if you're focused on the release, you cannot then switch your brain fast enough to the follow through motion, because the follow through is, it's frankly a reaction, not an action.
So it tells you everything about the tension that you've built up in
the system when you're at full draw.
So it's my job to watch you and see the motion that the elbow moves and the
hand moves and the bow hand moves and all sorts of different spots of the body,
even your head movement, the moment the string comes off your fingers, what
direction does a particular body part move and that the motion of that body part tells me the tension that you have at
full draw because I've shot enough arrows and I've watched enough people
with enough intention and attention to look at their form, analyze it.
And just overall, just watch.
I can see where the tension is built.
And then a lot of the stuff that we did working together was when you're at full draw,
I'm behind you and I'm like, I'm making motions and doing things to feel what you're feeling.
So I can assume that if the hands coming out, there's a change of tension going outward of the
release hand coming away from your face when you let go instead of maintaining that line along your
neck as it comes back off your face. So if I mimic what you're doing, I get a bit of an insight as to what you're feeling.
And then I can communicate with you nearly at the same language, hopefully,
maybe not using the same words, but at least trying to meet you where you're at.
Or tap the muscle I should be feeling as a primary mover when I'm supposed to feel it.
Correct. Yes.
And I only get that based on looking at what you're doing and just overall trying
to really just tear down the shot and see what's happening on the inside.
Yeah.
So flashing back then thinking about say the six months leading up to
Lancaster, a couple of things.
So one is I, for a very long time, people are going to find this pretty funny.
Number one, I didn't care about hitting the bullseye. I did care about grouping, right?
So I wanted arrows to land very close to one another. But if they were bottom left, top
right, my assumption was, and I'm sure this is based off of conversations we had, if you're shooting consistently,
if you're getting good groups consistently, it's not just a one-off kind of lucky bunch
of arrows, then moving that on the target face is not going to say necessarily simple,
but it ended up being pretty straightforward as we got further down.
But doing the blank bail,
got to the point with the blank bail where,
granted, it's like for me, 10 feet away, 12 feet away,
whatever, that these arrows were just getting clumped
like right on top of one another.
Even if I shot, I know this is maybe not your favorite thing,
but I did this too,
like sometimes releasing with my eyes closed.
And then how long before Lancaster did I start aiming with the crest of the arrow?
It's a, yeah, so about two weeks.
So, so what Tim was doing was, was having blind faith that the arrow would land in
the middle by using instinctive aiming per se.
Well, I was also doing a few things you recommended because in fairness, we tried to have me aim
earlier.
And I had for the first time target panic with the understanding that the tip is always
going to move.
But I had, I started to develop this anxiety around shooting because you didn't want to
let it go when the point wasn't right on the middle.
Exactly. Wasn't right on the bullseye, so to speak. And I also didn't have the biomechanical
control and the conditioning, which had to compensate for all sorts of things to do it
effectively. Right.
And we also hadn't adjusted your bow either because we did make compromises within your
equipment to help work with the shoulder.
We did a bunch of stuff with that we won't necessarily get into because it gets really
technical. But a lot of things that would confuse even certain experienced folks like the upper and
lower limbs, right? Where you would attach the string, switching those and making all sorts of
tweaks to the equipment to compensate or to allow this compromised shoulder to function.
To work with you, not against you.
Yeah, exactly.
Because for instance, the more weight,
there's a point of diminishing returns,
but since you can't put stabilizers on a bare bow,
people add weight.
They just have to keep the weight very close to the bow
because this ring has to be able to pass over the whole thing for you to use it in competition. But people had quite a bit of weight and it helps to
stabilize things. But I could not tried, but I couldn't do it. My shoulder would develop all
sorts of pain and tendon issues and just couldn't do it. And ultimately you could only shoot 60
arrows in a session.
Yeah. Couldn't put in the amount of arrows that was actually required to be proficient.
Yeah, exactly.
So it was like, okay, we're going to make yet another trade-off, which is I'm
going to sacrifice some of the stability in order to be able to add more volume.
But the point was to allow you to work with the system.
And because when we first started aiming, you started aiming early on that distraction,
because you weren't yet there physically pulled you out of the process.
If we were to lay out step by step every single checkpoint that I go through, you go through,
I mean, I'd be here for three hours. Yeah, I'd be here for three hours. It's like 25 steps. I mean,
it's I'm exaggerating a little bit, but yeah,
25 steps for my hook. Yeah. I mean, actually you're right.
If I were to go through like every single checkpoint, it's like hundreds of hundreds.
Yeah. Like a hundred checklist points for every shot.
And until you have a critical mass of those steps
on autopilot, you cannot add more steps. And therefore, given the compressed timeline we
were dealing with, it was also like waiting for my nervous system to adapt. And for that
reason, like sometimes if you're trying to grease the groove with a particular motor pattern, it's like, okay, like lighter limbs are fine.
Dial it down.
And then, so in terms of my instinctive approach, found a compromise was, all right, you're
not going to try to put the arrow tip or the crest of the arrow on the bullseye.
Again for simplicity, just saying that.
However, there are a few
things you are going to do. You're going to burn a hole into the very center of the target
with your eyes. And you're going to, people think of shooting an arrow if they haven't
had a lot of experiences, like pulling back and letting go. But you have this equal and
opposite action in pushing forward with the bow hand.
And there's a lot of technical detail that goes into how you do that.
But basically pushing a portion of your palm, kind of the right next to your lifeline in
the meaty pad of the thumb, let's just say roughly.
Kind of where your wrist meets your palm.
Yeah, exactly.
And pushing that also, so you're burning a hole into the target in a very dead center
and you're pushing that point on your palm also towards the exact center of the target.
Despite whatever you're seeing as far as your sight picture.
Your sight picture, right.
So where you don't worry about where the tip of the arrow is.
And maybe I said it, maybe you said, I can't remember.
Ended up calling this the Jesus takes the wheel approach.
You know, do you just take the wheel?
And it was shocking to see what happened because more often than not, I would
shoot better with that type of approach.
Yeah.
And it worked. Surprisingly it worked surprisingly well.
It worked surprisingly well.
Until.
Yeah, it worked surprisingly well until.
I guess we just decided, I mean, there were just, it wasn't reliable.
I mean, to give you an idea, and this will mean more to people who have shot some arrows,
but when I was hitting, I had some pretty good scores. I mean, in practice,
like, uh, I don't know. Into the two seventies, I believe. Yeah. 270. So like 540. 270 out of 330.
So decent. And, and your, the goal for where you were wanting to be was two 52 plus. So you were
in excess of your score goal for Lancaster. Yeah. I wanted to qualify for the top 64 shooters at Lancaster.
We trained using my Jesus, take the wheel approach for up until a few
weeks before Lancaster, because I was a little gun shy after having so much
trouble with trying to hold the point in one place or roughly floating.
And Jesus taking the wheel was working.
So it was working really well until we started having really variable lighting conditions
and we started dialing in the technique and the biomechanics for more precision.
And when we went to some test events, essentially, not a test event per se, but like a local
club shoot to see how things are going.
Exactly.
Yeah, that's a great point.
So, I mean, I don't recommend this guys.
So if you can do a ton of warmup tournaments before the big tournament, I highly recommend
doing that.
Just didn't really work out that way, but we went to a number of league nights and it
won two small events at the Eastern range in Salt Lake City, which is awesome.
I think you shot like Utah state shoots or
something. Yeah, I went in and basically just like audited the thing right to try to get
competition condition experience. And there are a few things that we noticed. So one is
in that environment, the bail, the canvas upon which you put the target, right? The backstop is black. And all of a sudden,
my eyes started doing funny things and I couldn't see the arrow tip as well.
Now, the reason that's relevant, I wasn't trying to place the tip of the arrow in the center of
the target, but I would try to see it so that I could tell if I was roughly in the center of
the target, right? So I would pay attention to the left, right?
And just really quick for those that don't know with bear bow,
you use the tip of your arrow as your aiming reference.
Part of the game is there is no sight.
So you're using the tip of the arrow as your aiming reference
and then you're placing that in a particular place every single time
to shoot a group in the middle.
Exactly. So all of a sudden, and thank God we did these test events, which I always have
done in any other sport also, you just do not know what's going to happen and how
you're going to respond in competition conditions until you do it.
Yep.
So there are a few things I think we did right.
There are a lot of things we did right, but doing those warmup tournaments, thank
God those were there and with the black black bale, the black background,
that ended up being-
It wasn't just a black bale, it was also a black stand,
and the wall behind it was also black.
It was just all out, just dark.
It was dark.
And so I could not reliably track,
because my arrow tip,
people who have done bare bowing are gonna find this funny,
it was like three feet below the
center of the target. I mean, it was really, really low. You can still see it. I could
still see it. Yeah. But it was hard to discern with that particular black bale and everything
around it. So I ended up having competitions. I was all over the place. Yeah. It wasn't
even just the black background that was different. It was also the lighting condition too, because the light was very different
compared to other places you shot in.
So the way you actually perceived objects in space was slightly different
and you could not adjust.
It was all over the place as you said, but the main thing was your
first few shots were so low.
Yep.
And with bare bow, we do what's called string walking. For those that don't know string
walking is essentially you're not pulling the string back right next to the arrow. You're
actually going down the string, walking down the string and that affects the trajectory of the arrow.
So you can essentially use the arrow point as your site. So you site in by walking up and down the
string. So put it another way, if you had a sight on your bow or on your gun or
whatever, you take some shots, assuming your technique is decent and then based on where it
okay, it landed bottom left and then you adjust the site to move that point of impact. Correct.
Can't do that in bare bow. Yeah, there's no actual aiming reference. Yeah, you're not allowed to use
the site. So what do you do? Well, the first thing is for left right, you do have something called the plunger. You think of it just as kind of a screw that it's much
more than that, but it pushes the arrow left or allows it to be more flush right. So you
can use that to adjust your left right. But how do you adjust your up down? Got a problem.
Okay. Well, the way you do that, and there are a lot of different approaches to this, but you're
crawling. So that means you're using your thumb to basically move your fingers down from the back of
the arrow to, let's just say the further down you go, the further down on the target it's going to
land and so on. And it needs to be very precise. This is part of what makes bareboast so frustrating and so
difficult. Like if you're, I mean, one millimeter, right? Like above or below a line.
So you have laser etched marks on your finger tab, the thing that protects your fingers from
the string and it's a flat piece of metal. And you were trying to be as precise enough to
crawl to the top of the laser etch line versus the bottom of the laser etch line.
And it's less than a millimeter wide.
Yeah.
And that makes a difference in terms of point of impact.
Yeah.
Okay.
So keeping all this in mind, when I got into those lighting conditions
with everything at play in competition, it was a disaster.
I mean, it was all over the place.
It was the worst score you had shot by a long shot.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, fuck me.
That's like three weeks, two weeks before Lancaster.
Maybe three weeks out.
Yeah.
And I was like, well, keep this up.
I'm definitely not going to Lancaster.
It'll just be a complete clown card.
It's either.
And I were looking at my wife and I were looking at each other after that day.
And we're like, I really hope Tim still wants to go to Lancaster.
Yeah, that was the most frustrated.
I think you guys have ever seen me.
It was probably after that.
There was a lot of, uh, statements you were making in regards to never being on such
an emotionally, an emotional roller coaster from day to day.
Yeah.
Cause that timeframe was, was really challenging for you.
Oh, it was wild because I would go from one setting and we ended up
shooting at a CrossFit gym from seven 30 to like 10 30 at night.
That was the only time and the only location that we could find.
And thank you to those guys. What a lifesaver Chris speeler
I think it was Park City fit
Amazing gym the cleanest gym I've ever seen
Yeah, you can eat off you can eat off the floor is incredible. So thank you to those guys
So we were training late at night very different lighting conditions, but I would have a day where I'm like man
I can't miss I can't miss. Yeah.
I am so far above. I have so many more points than necessary than I need to qualify for the top 64.
Like it was your goal. Yeah. Even if I'm 10% off of this, I'm good. And then went to this tournament
or mock tournament on the, in the case of the league nights and it was unmitigated disaster,
like a hundred points under what you wanted. Yeah. Yeah. And I was just like, in the case of the league nights and it was unmitigated disaster. Like a hundred points under what you wanted.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I was just like, what the hell is going on?
So there was a reason that I sometimes compare it to golf, even though I've
only played golf a few times, it's like, you're looking at this, you're like,
okay, there are a hundred different checkpoints.
Which one is it?
If it's even one of those hundred.
Yeah.
And that's the detective work.
And so I'm looking at you and everything going down the list,
try this, try this, try this, try this, try this, try this.
And then it's like, maybe you should start aiming, I think.
Yeah.
Because that's really the only thing
that we haven't done up until this point.
Yeah, exactly.
So we went through the list, it was like, nope, fail, fail,
fail, fail, fail.
All right.
So two weeks out, we start aiming and it started working. And because you had developed your technique enough that you didn't have that
aiming distracting you from the process, from what you needed to do.
And a lot of that work that we did beforehand when you were instinctive
aiming, I don't think we really quite covered that, but instinctive aiming
is, you know, the tension and direction of the bow arm and just staring and
burning a hole with your eyes, But your subconscious brain like takes over and just
makes the arrow land in the middle. It's like throwing a ball. You don't have an site to aim
with when you throw something or throw an object at something through repeated motion, you make
adjustments and you don't even do that consciously. Same thing with archery when you're shooting
instinctive per se. For sure. And there's some amazing instinctive shooters.
They don't tend to go to competition for reasons we can get into.
But for instance, I don't want to name them.
I don't want to dock some, but this amazing guy from Albania at one range I went to and
this guy all day long with his hunting bow, like a trad hunting bow made out of wood,
just drilling the center of this target for two hours straight every time I saw.
And he would kind of pull back and then as soon as he got his finger to the corner of
his mouth, he would release and that was it.
And the guy's just a beast.
I mean, incredibly good.
So we finally started aiming.
And I want to mention a couple of other
things that I think were key to ultimately being very happy with performance at Lancaster,
even though of course I always want to do better. But the first I would say is
standardizing a handful of things. So obviously the shot sequence and anchor and aiming system and all of that.
The second was experimenting in mock tournament conditions because we also discovered, for instance,
that when we went from we upgraded from a very, very narrow arrow, so the shaft of the arrow and
therefore the head of the arrow as well in
this particular case because they're not broadheads or anything, going from a very, very thin
arrow to a maximum allowable javelin sized arrow.
And what's the reason for that?
So basically an archery, when you touch the higher scoring ring where your arrow lands,
you get the higher value.
So all you have to do is touch that ring.
You don't have to break the line.
You don't even have to be inside out.
You just have to touch it.
And that's enough to get you the higher score.
And statistically speaking, somebody did a study and analysis of scores across
the board at indoor archery tournaments.
And if you're in that range of score where you were actually targeting to be,
to be at Lancaster, there's a very statistically significant impact on your score going up by a tremendous amount.
I think it's somewhere in the neighborhood of eight plus points every 30 shots, which is a massive jump at that 280, 270 range.
Somewhere in there, the bigger arrows make statistically speaking
a huge difference.
At the highest level, the guys that win the tournaments
when they're shooting say one or two points down
from perfect, they do not make any difference at all.
Like statistically it's a zero sum.
There's no additional benefit to shooting the fat arrows.
But for me.
But for you, statistically it made sense.
Yeah, it made a lot of sense. What that meant though is we had to adjust a bunch of the gear and when you put the
arrow on your bow, I'll just keep it simple, you have an arrow rest and we had an arrow rest that
had been working great. Fantastic. It had been working so well with the little tiny darts that I had been using.
Once we put the much heavier arrows on, and I mean, I guess what is the model of those
arrows?
So the arrows you were using was the Easton RX-7.
RX-7.
And before that you were using a Easton Avant, Avant, I don't know how to say it.
Basically you went from an arrow that was smaller
than the diameter of your average pen or pencil
to something that was three pens combined almost.
Oh yeah.
As far as the diameter is concerned.
So big, big difference there.
Yeah, and much heavier.
Yes.
Not just a heavier arrow, but also a heavier point
because there's a lot of technical stuff here,
but as an archer, you want your arrow to fly perfect and you can adjust
parameters of the arrow, the stiffness of the arrow, how resistant it is to
bending the point weight, the knock weight, the fletching size, the arrow
length, all sorts of things to make the arrow work with the bow.
So they fly perfectly straight because ultimately you don't want it to have
a tendency to go one direction.
You want it to have like a forgiveness.
So if you make a mistake, it's not going to deviate far from the middle.
And what we discovered when I did my, I guess it was probably the first time did the tournament
conditions a few things.
Number one, my instinctive shooting was not going to work right.
It was all over the place. On top of that, with the much thicker arrows, which are much heavier, the arrow rest, which in this case is
a fall away, it was a fall away rest. What was the model on this? So for those barebow listeners out
there, it is the sniper arrow rest, Z N I P E R. So it is a magnetically controlled drop away arrow rest.
So for those that don't know archery,
a drop away arrow rest is a rest that holds the arrow
and supports it when you're at full draw.
But the moment you let go, it snaps down out of the way
to give the arrow the maximum amount of clearance
as it's going by the bow.
For bare bow, you use it because of the awful flight
of the arrow that happens due to string walking. When you go down the string and you don't pull it straight back.
So what was happening was, and this is not a design flaw of that rest.
It's just, we literally hit the absolute limitations of the system because you have
to make it stiff enough, hard enough to drop to hold the arrow up so you don't
accidentally bump it when you're moving around, but you want it to be soft enough so it drops when you let go of the string.
And because the arrow was heavy and more importantly, the point weight was so heavy, it was not
dropping.
Yeah.
So also barebow shooters that are listening, we were using the 2315 size RX7, so the stiff
420 versions, the 420 spine versions, and we had to run heavy point weights to break the spine down.
Ideally, we should have run the 21 size arrows, I believe that I forget the exact
spine, I think it's 570 or somewhere in there much weaker.
And we should have shot those light point weights, but I don't know if
they are even available yet.
They are, or were on backwater at the time.
So I couldn't get you the arrow for the lighter point weight.
So we literally just hit a roadblock of the arrow rest, not
working with that arrow setup.
And how much can it change your impact?
The 20 yards, if the arrow rest is not fault, six inches.
Yeah.
So if, if not more, yeah, game over.
Yeah, that's it.
You're done.
Yeah.
You're ten ring again.
So that's part of the reason.
Yeah.
In addition to my instinctive aiming, completely shitting the bed and not working given all the factors we've
already talked about, I'd say one out of every four shots maybe. Yeah. Was, it was not falling.
And so mentally you're struggling with the aiming. Then all of a sudden the equipment's not working. So it's just adding insult to injury and it's just making this mental struggle so much worse.
So I should highlight that there are so many reasons in any sport to mimic or rehearse
competition conditions, but in the case of archery, one is you want to get used to being
crowded, right?
If you're training by yourself, it's not the way it works at any of these larger tournaments.
Like you're going to be on a line
and literally could have somebody, I don't know,
how far away were folks with me?
Less than a foot.
Less than a foot.
Probably.
In front of me and behind me.
Correct.
And I mean, you just want to hope if you're right-handed,
you don't have a left-handed person right next to you
on your right side,
because you're going to basically be eye-gazing them the whole time.
It's really distracting.
Although I encouraged you during your training at Gotham, to go find a left-handed guy and stand right in front of him.
Yeah, totally.
So I did that.
So I had the practice.
That is one reason.
Another is to see what happens to your mental state, if and when.
I guess it's not really if.
I mean, at my level, when you make mistakes.
At my level too.
Yeah, it's like what happens, right?
And those play poker, like do you go tilt, monkey tilt?
Like how bad does it get?
And can you recover if and when that happens?
And I was just, the wheels came off.
Yeah, it did. The wheels came off. Yeah, it did.
The wheels came off. I was like, aren't you stupid? Fuck this game.
I didn't say that. But I was pretty...
I think you did inside.
Inside I was definitely, I was not happy.
And then it was really, I think, a combination of, I mentioned a few things.
We talked about the tournament conditions.
And with each mock tournament
or league night that I did, the scores went up. So everything was trending in the right
direction and I was trying to, I mean, I used AI and all these tools to find every possible
shop within an hour and a half driving distance and what kind of targets are they using? Can
I bring my own target, which we ended up doing, right?
Yeah. You went and shot a blue and white face league night, an NFA league night
and shot a colored face.
So instead of shooting the five arrows that everyone else shot, you were
shooting three arrows, I was running a timer manually behind you, keeping tabs
on, you know, your actual pacing because within tournaments, like a simple little
added change is just a time limitation.
And even though you may never even remotely come close to running out of time,
just knowing that there's a time limitation is enough to make you panic.
Well, that's another thing that happened to me, right?
So given, let's just say, you know, six months of serious practice,
now it's like two weeks out starting to aim, and I still have a lot that is manual.
It's not yet automatic.
So I am a pretty slow shooter.
Well, cause you have to think through every.
Yeah.
Yeah. And so how much time do you have for how many shots?
You have two minutes to shoot three arrows.
Yeah.
Which sounds like a lot.
There was often times you were had three to five seconds left,
which is not a good feeling.
She'll see the timer and it's like, what happens when it goes from green to yellow?
Yeah. And so 30 seconds less, a yellow light comes on that's way brighter than the green light. Green is meaning you're just standard time left. Right. And what happens to a lot of people,
what happened to me initially is I would rush through that shot and let it rip. But I would
still have 15 seconds left, but I rushed it and it would not be a good shot. It was a change to
your process. Yeah. All right. So other things mentioned standardizing as much as possible. So one was,
and look guys, I'm not proud of this, but I'll admit it, figuring out expedient fuel that you
can get or bring with you everywhere, right? Especially with the amount of travel I was doing,
that was actually very good practice. And it's like, okay, let me know how much caffeine I can tolerate. What am I going to use? Does it
help at all? Because oodles and oodles of liquid anxiety does not help you shoot better, which is
why also I beta blockers are not allowed in competition unless you get deliberately fat
enough that you have a prescription for them. That's a whole separate story. There are actually
people who do that,
just like the sprinters in the Olympics who,
oh my God, happen to all be narcoleptics.
So they can take modafinil.
What a coincidence.
All right, putting all that aside.
So what does that mean?
That means that I wanted to be able to fuel myself
from things I could get at any convenience store,
almost any gas station.
So it would be some form of basic protein.
Don't judge me, but like, you know, maybe it's like muscle milk or whatever. And then
having almonds, I had tolerated Maui Nui venison sticks really well. We knew that I could digest
that reasonably quickly. So always traveling with that. Then figured out a couple of other
things. So I'll give a couple
of shout outs because these products ended up being really, really helpful. So peak tea,
P-I-Q-U-E, which are basically, if you think about matcha as whole leaf, these are Puer
oolong, they're all whole leaf. They're powdered, so you can mix them instantly.
Even in cold water.
Even in cold water. Even if you're combining it with other things. So I figured out the timing for using that,
using glutamine, which is incredibly cheap.
And I use momentous glutamine,
also the next one I'll talk about.
And for muscle recovery and soreness,
it is incredibly effective.
I wrote about this in the four hour body.
I know you're pretty skeptical at first
I mean the amount you were taking was insane
Yeah, there's a lot after doing a little bit of research on my own and with the help of Heather
We saw that it was good for people with leaky gut syndrome. Yep at very high doses
So it's if it's okay for that then it's got to be alright for the overall GI system, right?
So it's like let's give it a try And we started trying it as well after seeing you pretty much take an
entire bottle of it in a day. Well, it actually makes a massive difference for muscle soreness.
Yeah.
And it's amazing.
Yeah, it's wild. So I would say when I'm doing, when we were doing hard training and look,
talk to your medical professional, I'm not giving medical advice here, but I was using a scoop, which is say five grams
of creatine three or four times over the course
of a full training session, I would say.
And then what we figured out reasonably late,
this was a lucky discovery, ended up playing around
because I had used this actually on very, very long hikes,
which is something called fuel,
also by Momentus. And that is a combination of electrolytes and let's just call them more slowly
digested carbohydrate and a handful of other things. But it's basically like Bugatti Kool-Aid for
flow other things, but it's basically like Bugatti Kool-Aid for mental and physical performance. And it was visibly noticeable when I was on this cocktail and when I was not.
I'd start getting shaky.
And then if I had, and I timed this, I had everything on a schedule and I knew how long
it took me to digest.
Cause the last thing you want to do is have like three protein bars and then get up to
shoot and you have all this blood in your stomach.
Or even worse a crash and then you're like, oh, emergency fuel.
How long does it take to come back to?
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So figuring all that out was key.
And I would just travel like I would have the fuel, the glutamine, the peak, I would
have bottles of water so I could mix all that on my own with a shaker bottle. And these ended up being, I think, really key to also reducing the decision fatigue
and possibility for logistics challenges. And that's why with Lancaster, like most high
level competitors, how early, like how far before their first
shooting do they arrive at Lancaster?
Most pro shooters?
Yeah.
45 minutes, half hour, an hour.
But when would their plane land?
Oh, sorry.
A few days.
Yeah.
You know, well, it depends.
Depends on the season, because if the season's really crammed in, you may land the night before the
competition starts because one just ended somewhere across the world.
But ideally you try to get there a couple of days early.
So that way you shake off the jet lag, you get used to the bed,
you just get used to where everything's laid out and you know, you kind of just
see how things are going.
But if you've been to the event before, 10 days, 12 days early, I think something like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so again, this is just if it's helpful for folks, I do this whenever I'm competing in anything new.
Right.
So figure out where you are, figure out your food options, figure out your bed.
For instance, I slept really poorly on the hotel mattress.
So ordered a pillow topper, got that all figured out.
Where are we going to practice?
How long does it take to drive from your hotel to the venue? Right. Yeah.
How does that differ with different times of day? Yep. And what does it look like?
The venue? So we did a lot of different things too.
We went to the venue early and checked it out after hours when no one was there.
We're the only ones walking around except for the Zamboni clean in the floor.
Yeah. Right. And so we're checking it out. And so you get an idea of what the field looks like,
what the lighting looks like, where the bathrooms are. This is not a small thing,
right? Because when you're shooting at this particular tournament, on each bail, you have
four targets, A, B, C, D. So you're shooting with three other people, you all score one another, and I'm simplifying
things a little bit, but basically you're switching back and forth.
Two people shoot and then the next two people shoot and then the next people shoot and you
alternate back and forth.
So you may not have a whole lot of time to get to the bathroom.
How crowded is the bathroom?
Yep.
Right.
Where is the least crowded bathroom?
Where's the secret bathroom?
Figuring all this out ahead of time, because I recognize, look, I don't have a lot of time under my belt. I've trained my ass off to the extent that my body would handle it. Like I pushed
my body and I do need to give a huge thank you to Heather, who is a top tier manual therapist,
magician with soft tissue and no way that I could have
made it to Lancaster without her help.
You were on the ragged edge.
I was run pretty ragged.
Yeah.
I mean, I had kinesiology tape all over me.
A couple of other recovery tools that were really helpful.
One I really didn't anticipate because I had no exposure to it, but this is, I guess, full
spectrum cannabis
oil.
Yeah.
Is it Rick Simpson?
Yeah.
RSO, Rick Simpson Oil, I believe is the name of the guy that came up with this.
And what was fascinating for me, you do not feel any psychoactive effects whatsoever.
Topical to be clear.
Topical, yes.
It does not cross the blood brain barrier.
Not suppositories.
Yeah, no.
Don't fall for the marketing campaigns for the archery.
No.
THC sponsors.
And you don't feel any psychoactive effect.
Obviously do not break the law where you live, so pay attention.
But in terms of reducing or eliminating muscle spasms, incredible, incredibly effective.
And also if you're going to get, let's just say massage therapy, do
not get necessarily Heather be able to speak more intelligently to this, but incredibly
deep hardcore work right before you're going to train. I mean, there are different types
of massage for flushing. Sure. Yeah. You don't want to overly lengthen the muscle because
then you can lead that joint that it's supporting or around to become potentially unstable, which results in a potential serious potential for an injury to the joint, like an
actual injury. Yeah. You can also get really sore as I was saying, increase your inflammation,
which does not help with anything. Right. My main issue was like my shoulder or my wrist or my
forearms would just be on fire. They'd be all swollen like a puffer fish. And it's
like, okay, sure. This is our first day of four days of training. We need to fix this.
And how do we fix this? From an outsider's perspective, that it was fascinating to see with
unlimited ability to just make things happen, what you can do to maximize your potential to perform.
So what can you control?
Can you get that bed topper?
Can you get there 10 days early?
Can you see the venue?
Can you, you know, have the bugatti of electrolytes?
Can you get the things that actually make a difference and have you
experimented enough leading up to the event to know how you respond?
And if you take enough detailed notes, you know exactly how you're going to respond.
What is the lag time?
What is the delay?
How many days after I shoot this 300 arrow day, am I going to be sore and
unable to shoot properly?
Yeah, exactly.
So many different things.
And actually this is as good a point as any to mention the glue that holds us
all together, which is note taking and training logs.
Yes, entirely. Right? This is such a pivotal thing to consistently performing under pressure.
You might get hot once and shoot great and win a tournament, but if you didn't know what you did that led up to that, how are you going to repeat it? And so you have to blueprint, as Joel says in his system, the shot IQ,
how do you blueprint an ideal shot or an ideal tournament?
And leading up to that, a training session, whatever it may be,
what can you do to replicate that every time?
Yep.
And a few things that were surprising to me, for instance, if I felt like I'd
just been put through a meat grinder, I would maybe left to my own devices, look back one training session,
maybe two training sessions, but often it's five days ago,
five training sessions ago,
you have to look back further than I would have expected.
That is going to be beyond your memory. For sure. Right.
How many arrows did you shoot? Yeah. What did you do that day?
Did you strength train as well? How about massage therapy? arrows did you shoot? Yeah. What did you do that day? Did you strength train as well?
How about massage therapy? What did you eat? Whatever it is, you've got to know if you don't know you're guessing. Yeah, exactly
And also you know, we're mentioning a lot of these different things
Most of these are not expensive in the grand scheme of things, correct
I mean the only one that might be out of range that I used quite a bit is the low intensity continuous ultrasound.
Sure.
There are these devices that basically put a very light ultrasound stimulus through these
electrodes and there's a SAM device.
There are a number of other ones that is like us, LICUS, low intensity continuous ultrasound.
People can look it up.
That one's a little pricey, but there's a whole lot you can do that is not expensive.
Almost everything I've mentioned is well within reach.
I mean, you're doing it right now.
You got a pen and a paper.
Yeah.
That's like the weapon right there.
You know, that is so important.
I've encouraged so many people I work with
that come to me for coaching to take detailed notes.
And I can't tell you how few do. And you're the only one that I've ever seen people I work with that come to me for coaching to take detailed notes.
And I can't tell you how few do.
And you're the only one that I've ever seen take a sufficient level of detail of notes on how the training session went, what you did and how you ultimately felt.
And then just being able to look back and see, I can't tell you how many times
you pulled it out and said, let me look back to San Diego when I went and visited
coach Lee and he told me to go away after 45 minutes.
Oh yeah, this is what we worked on. Interesting. Okay. Let's make sure I'm doing that today. Yeah. Three months later or more
than that. Yeah. Yeah.
That ended up being such an important key to everything.
And I would log the workout, give you just a couple of tips. I mean,
this is going to seem really rudimentary and it's like, yeah, but very few people
do it. When did you work out?
When did you do your training? When was your last meal prior to that? Like write this stuff down, you are not going to remember. And then going through training, it's like, well, if you had
a period of shooting really poorly, and then you tested a number of things to fix it, what happened?
So for instance, that pulling back on the pinky of the bowhand ended up being
something when I got fatigued, I would start to lose that tension and it would
have a whole cascade of negative effects.
And I was like, okay, interesting for whatever reason that Q seems to fix a lot.
Yes.
And there were a handful of things that you're only going to discover
if you are taking those types of notes.
And I think this applies to way more than archery.
If you're not really paying attention to what you're doing
and maximizing your chances for success,
and ultimately maintaining what you're doing in training
or leading up to an event, whatever it may be,
if you change everything at the event, because I'm at an event, whatever it may be. If you change everything
at the event, because I'm at the event, I should probably clean up my diet. Why would you do that?
It's too late. It's too late. If you're eating Cheetos at home, as much as you shouldn't be
eating Cheetos at home, you should probably just do it at the tournament. If you drink 7-Up or you
have a beer the night before or whatever it is, you should probably continue to do that. You don't
want to all of a sudden sober up at the event, deal with withdrawal
syndromes from not having enough sugar because you used to have cat and
crunch for breakfast. I don't know, whatever it may be, you might want to
just maintain the same thing. And so this applies to so many things, not just
archery.
Yeah. Oh, absolutely. And also if it's helpful to people, when I would take
notes, I mean, you can even kind of, I don't know, I won't show off all this because some of these are top secret in this one,
but I also basically draw a little square.
You've seen these in the bottom right of each page in this training log.
And my training log is actually like this big.
It's larger paper.
It's like bigger than an eight and a half by 11.
Yeah, it's, it's a large notebook. And in
that bottom right corner, I some not only taking notes, I'm also reviewing all of those
notes after the session. And in the bottom right, I am putting my next actions or key
takeaways to focus on for the next workout. And so when I land at the gym or in this case, the range the
next day or two days later, I know exactly where I'm picking up. I do not have to spend
any time on that. All right. So we're doing all this stuff chugging muscle milks and fuel
and glutamine and peak tea and learning to aim. Yes. Like a big boy big boy. Then what happens at Lancaster? What's the goal?
The expectations, hopes, like from your perspective, I'd be curious to hear.
Jared Suellentrop I would say my number one hope was just that you'd be happy with how it went,
no matter what, because ultimately there's no way to know how it's going to go. Would it be great
if you made the cut? Would it be great if you won the event? Sure, that'd be cool. But how is it going to go? No one knows. Competition is very interesting.
It really is. It's just unknown until you do it.
Just a quick side note. So I remember, I don't want to mention his name, but it's training
somewhere. And I saw my first bare bow shooter who is in my eyes really good and in practice just
Incredible and do you remember what you said to me after that? I
Can tell you you're like practice scores don't matter. Oh, yeah
on some level
Consistent practice scores are one indicator. Yeah, but competition is just a different
It's a totally different animal, different animal.
And so you can expect to falter.
You hope to do well, but ultimately it's, you know, looking at where you were,
you really hit rock bottom three weeks before the event.
Right.
So from there, there was an upward trajectory and you were
heading in the right direction.
So that's a lot of stuff that I remember.
I was reminding you about you're headed in the right direction. So that's a lot of stuff that I remember. I was reminding you about you're headed in the right direction.
You just have to maintain your focus on these things.
Do not get distracted by anything else.
Each arrow is its own.
You give it the care that it deserves.
The arrow that you just shot does not affect the next and the arrow that you're about to
shoot doesn't affect anything.
It's just its own individual thing.
Treat it with care.
It's a 60 arrow round, not a one arrow round.
So it's really unimportant what happens on each individual arrow.
Ultimately, it's how you control the whole event, how you maintain focus,
whatever it may be, just composure ultimately is what's required to succeed.
It's not about being perfect.
It's just about maintaining what you do in practice better than the next guy.
That's who wins.
And so that was just the main focus that I was trying to hammer home to really say this is what you need to lean into and avoid
any of this other distracting thoughts. It's not Lancaster. It's nothing. It's just another venue.
You're just shooting arrows. Nobody's interfering with you. It's you and the bow and no one else.
So ultimately nobody's going to prevent you from succeeding or failing except for yourself. So you
just got to get out of your own way and let it happen.
You've already put in the time you put in the effort, just go have fun.
Just shoot some arrows and maintain composure.
Of course I was nervous, but I also came into it feeling like I cannot imagine
with the limitations that I have having taken this more seriously.
Like I've done the prep I was humanly capable of doing.
So ultimately it was just, there was no expectations.
I don't like to have expectations when it comes to competition because it's
just, it adds a level of pressure distraction.
Well, I can also say for myself, I hadn't done a proper large competition in a super
long time, right? 20 years, 20 years, 20 plus years. And for me, I was so curious. I'm like,
is that gear going to click? Is there going to be another gear? And ultimately there was,
and I was very happy to see it because I had not seen it in the mock tournaments.
No, me neither for the record. Yeah. And part of that though for me was, okay,
now this is a real competition, right? This is what we've been training for. Adding extra pressure to myself now, much like changing your diet last minute is not going to help.
The training has been done. And so coming into it,
I don't even know if I've told you guys this,
maybe I did, but I basically just told myself,
this is just treat this like training with distraction.
That's it.
This is just another training session
with a lot of distractions.
It's healthy.
And I have had my best competition performances, whether it was, you know, going to the world
in tango or the national championships in Sancho Chinese kickboxing when I've done that
and having high hopes, certainly.
But the mental prep that I did for that was my pass fail here is not the score.
It's how well I can recover and keep my calm.
Exactly.
That was it.
And I was like, okay, I have a lot of room for improvement because I remember
throwing a tantrum of epic proportions when everything went sideways at Easton.
Yeah.
In fairness, that was pretty rough.
It was rough.
That was rough. Yeah. Yeah. I felt bad too. Yeah, it was bad. Yeah. In fairness, that was pretty rough. It was rough. That was rough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I felt bad too.
Yeah, it was bad.
Yeah.
It was really bad.
And I was like, okay, so this is it.
Like, this is like a meditation practice and success is viewing it as training
with distraction and just keeping calm.
And if I get excited, that's okay.
Just like reeling it back in.
And so Heather was sitting there with a mutual friend
and what Heather was saying is she was looking at me
and she's like, wow, Tim is overstimulated.
And it's very easy to be overstimulated there.
I mean, it's so loud.
It's so loud.
It is a cavernous space.
There are how many shooters?
There was close to 600 shooters on the line at one time.
Yeah. And what Heather was saying is that when I crossed the line to straddle the line to shoot,
there was just this like calm that washed over me and she was saying those.
You were just high eyed walking around.
My eyes were saucers beforehand.
And the moment you crossed, it was just like, this is what I do.
This is how it's going to go.
And it was just, it was the first time, genuinely the first time where it was just like you
held your shit together.
Yeah.
So that was an experience.
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, oh yeah, I've done this before because I guess, and we'll get to
this, but it's like historically, like I know I don't have a technical
advantage over everyone there.
These, some of these guys have been shooting forever.
Yeah.
Right.
And I was like, okay, well, how can I try to stack the deck?
And we already talked about a lot, right?
Nutrition, sleep, taking away handicaps that I can easily remove.
Then I was like, okay, well, being consistent for
60 arrows, which means trying to contain the fluctuations in energy and also contain the
fluctuations in emotional reactions. And I remember taking the first few shots and I'm
standing on the line and there's a person 12 inches in front of me and sweet, sweet people, but her arrows are sticking out
and literally jabbing me in the stomach,
like the, you know, the knocks, the back of the arrow.
And I'm like, that's distracting.
And then there was a guy right behind me
who has a huge long bow.
He's in the long bow division.
And he's holding it sideways right in front of me.
So I can't even lift my bow.
Meanwhile, the timer's going.
Yeah. Right. And I'm like, Oh man. Okay. But then I was able to, I think in part from visiting the
venue, in part from doing the Easton comp prep and having the black bales, which they also had
at Lancaster walking in that late night when the Zamboni was there
because it's indoor lighting to see what the lighting is like.
Let my eyes kind of adjust and feel it out.
Not worrying about the bathroom, not worrying about nutrition.
And it took a little bit of shooting to get comfortable with the process and the turnaround
speed from one pair to the next
pair shooting on the same bail. But ultimately ended up with a, I think it was exactly 500
points, right? I think so. Yeah. I think it was exactly. Look, somebody could find it
online. It's easy enough to find, but ended up with 500 points. That's not anywhere close
to my practice high scores, but that's fine. But it was my best tournament
scoring.
And you're most importantly, in my opinion, the best
performance you've had. It's not about the outcome. It's
about the performance. Yeah. If I shoot beautifully, in my
opinion, and someone else out shoot me, I have to be happy
with that. I did the best I can.
What does that mean? I think I'd have to go back and look. I
don't know what number
I think you were 80 something 80s in there. Yeah. So you're, you know,
not quite at 64 where you wanted to be, but it was really fun. And just the fact that I didn't
lose it, right. Irrecoverably was a huge highlight. And also we ended up because I'm a glutton for
punishment, you know, doing,
I guess it was the next day, maybe, maybe it was a day later, but doing a bunch of practice
and figuring some stuff out. Whereas like, oh, okay. I feel like automatically some of these tweaks
would lead to a higher score. And if I can basically just get my practice scores closer
to my competition scores, or maybe you frame it the other way, then if I can basically just get my practice scores closer to my competition scores, or
maybe you frame it the other way, then if I'm able to maintain my composure, it's like,
okay, like I think certainly like a 540 or something like that is, should be enough to
get into the top 64 for sure.
You would think so.
You would think so.
Yeah.
So great experience.
Thanks so much for the amazing coaching.
Heather, thank you for keeping my body in one piece. And I'm just trying to think of what else we could mention just in terms of approach or anything else that's worth adding. I think, you know, one approach maybe in this particularly given some of my orthopedic issues and just like tendonosis limitations and so on.
This isn't totally right and I'll explain the modification, but this actually comes
from a very famous track coach with many, many world records to his athletes credit.
Hank Kreijchenhoff or something like that.
I believe he's Dutch.
I'm sure I'm messing up that, but it's in the four hour body if people are looking for
the actual name. And he said, effectively, my goal is to do
the least necessary, not the most possible.
And the way that ties into the training is,
I found if I really, really overdid it,
then I might need four or five days off
if my shoulder's really inflamed and problematic.
So it's like, okay, how can we use smaller doses with higher frequency to make this work?
Ultimately, that's super beneficial in archery. So if I were to wave a magic wand and try to make
things better the next time, it would be doing archery more often. So it's not about how many
arrows you do in one session. It's how many sessions in a week can you do and how many days in
between each session are there? Anything more than one is too
many in my opinion. So if you could standardize your schedule
better, better for the sake of archery performance that of
course requires sacrifice elsewhere, time hanging out,
time working, whatever it may be.
It's a challenge.
I mean, for the competition, I mean, that was a commitment, right?
Cause it was like, unless my body failed for a period of time, which happened
with alarming regularity, but I mean, certainly when we're looking at the
training in Utah and a lot of other places, I mean, certainly
in person. I mean, it was kind of like two and a half to three hour.
It was intense sessions and in Tim's famous last words, one more end, one more end. Yeah.
One more end. It's like one more bunch of arrows and I'd be like, one more. Okay. Three
hours. All right. One more. Three hours later. Okay. One more.. Yeah. One more end. Which by the way, that ended up for solo training
being important to me because you gave me the advice of, and this might sound a little
counterintuitive, but not setting a minimum number of hours you need to shoot, but a maximum
number of arrows. And it's like, when you hit that you're done. Yes. No matter what,
no matter if it's your best day ever and you cannot miss and you're just enjoying archery more than you've ever enjoyed in
your entire life, you have to stop. But also if you're struggling, you've got to
push towards that upper end of that limit because of you need to put in where
I got into trouble was let's just say I wanted to shoot a hundred arrows as a
minimum and I would go if I were shooting poorly and I got to shoot a hundred arrows as a minimum and I would go, if I were shooting
poorly and I got to a hundred, I'll be like, I'm not ending on that. It's terrible. Yeah,
exactly. Whip my back. I'm not ending on that terrible shitty end. There's no way I want
to end on a good rep. And so I push and push and push and more often than not, it would
just continue to deteriorate. And then I would end up with some type of inflamed shoulder, inflamed X, Y, or Z
that now keeps me out of training for three or four days.
Or potentially hit you real hard five days later as you start.
Exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
So not worth it.
Yeah.
But that takes a lot and it to be the dead horse, it comes back to also the journal.
The training logs.
But something that was interesting that you kind of discovered watching people
on the practice range the day after you competed or whenever that was, and you
learned some things you were watching a couple of different shooters out there.
There was a, I think the number one ranked bare bow shooter that won the ranking
round that year and set the new Lancaster record for the ranking round.
You were watching him shoot. You first pointed him out to me and said,
Hey, keep an eye on him. See if there's anything that he's doing that maybe I
should start to work on as, you know, just maybe there's something I'm missing.
And, you know, I watched him for two arrows and I think I just walked right over
to him. I said, Hey, how's it going? What's your name? How long you been shooting?
Oh, I was successful recurve archer. because his form looked recurve like there's a very
distinct look to that. And he shot as a junior competitively nationally, I believe for Canada,
if I remember correctly. And then he shot all through college shooting recurve competitively.
And then he started shooting compound for a while and kind of set down the bow,
came back to it like four or five years later and started shooting bare bow.
And so he already had a decade plus of archery experience doing essentially
the same thing, the same kind of form.
And then you pointed out some 13, 14 year old Korean kids or something like that.
Korean American kids that were just pounding.
Like they're, they were just stacking the
arrows in at the center.
Yeah.
I mean.
And we say stacking.
It's shooting six arrow ends in the size of the
okay symbol that you can make with your fingers
basically.
Like, and that's impressive, especially at that age.
Yeah.
And so same kind of thing, you know, you're like,
I pointed them out, look at these guys, you know,
I bet you they're shooting X amount of arrows a day for, you know, 300're like, I pointed them out. Look at these guys, you know, I bet you they're shooting X amount of arrows a day for, you know,
300 plus there.
I'm just guessing they shoot a lot.
I can tell.
So I went over to their coach who didn't really
want to respond to me.
So then I went to the kids directly.
I was just like, how much you shoot, how long
you've been shooting.
Yeah.
Which is possible because we have to go pull
our arrows at the same time.
Yes.
Right.
So you can have a conversation.
Yeah.
And even if not, it's the practice range.
And again, we talked about the community.
They're very welcoming.
People are willing to discuss and communicate
because it's just everybody is in the same game.
They're all struggling, quote unquote,
with the same thing that you're struggling with.
And so they're just in a different stage.
And so you can learn from their experience
if you ask them the right questions
and hopefully they're willing to share.
Yeah, the kids are super friendly. Super friendly. And so, hey, how long you've been shooting?
Five years. How many days a week do you shoot? Six days a week. How many arrows a day do you shoot?
Two to three hundred arrows every single day. That's why they're good, Tim.
Well, now, okay. Now I'm going to get back on the witness stand, defend myself. Not defend myself.
Not that you weren't good. It's just, there's a stage.
No, no, no. It's not saying that I'm good. I mean, they're doing a lot of volume,
but that was despite having technique that was not great. To my untrained eye, I'm like, I can't tell.
Yeah. But I said this, this and that they should do these things. You know, they,
despite these issues, they're still able to do well because they've put in sustained reps for a very long period of time.
So they're able to just default to what they do.
And you had six months.
They had five years.
There's a huge difference.
That's the different thing.
Yeah.
And it's just, you get looking, you look experienced from experience.
You don't just get it.
You've got to make that groove, as you said, in the brain and really make that neuromotor connection strong enough to where it just fluidly happens.
That's why an expert is an expert.
They've done the same thing thousands and thousands and thousands of times.
I can't tell you how many I'm well over a million shots the same way.
Same technique, same thought process, same thought at full draw.
So it's yeah, an immense amount of effort and work over time, sustained effort. Same technique, same thought process, same thought at full draw.
So it's, yeah, an immense amount of effort and work over time.
Sustained effort is what really makes you good.
Yeah.
But that's true for everything.
Yeah.
Well, it's been a hell of a journey.
It's not over.
It's not over.
But we might bounce around, might ask some more questions.
But do you want to talk about the
backyard championship?
Yeah.
So what the hell is the backyard championship?
So everybody loves to be a backyard world champion per se.
Because everybody, like I said, practice scores don't matter, right?
Everybody can shoot well in their backyard.
Everybody's happy to tell you how they've shot so well in their backyard and post their
pictures of their targets all over social media.
Or potentially not just their backyard, but the range they shoot at or their club.
And that's great.
Like I'm all for it.
I love that people are proud and passionate about what they're doing.
And, uh, so we're, we're forming this thing that we're calling the
backyard championships, which is essentially a digital tournament.
We're going to have two events this year, an indoor and event and an outdoor
event, and essentially you will with a honor code and a buddy system, hopefully
submit your scores after you sign up for the actual event.
And after you submit your scores, we'll have a digital leaderboard that people
can essentially rank themselves amongst other people throughout the world.
And it'll be bracketed, male, female, adult kid, different disciplines,
compound recurve, bare bow, you name it.
Just stick bow, horse bow.
I don't, whatever it may be.
As we identify important disciplines, we will make sure to have that available.
So you can compete against other people shooting a similar bow.
So this kind of ties into encouraging others to pick up a bow and shoot archery.
And as Joel Turner told me it it's archery. Try it. Meaning it doesn't matter what style of bow you
shoot. You could shoot horse bow with your thumb. You could shoot a trad bow. You can shoot a
compound with a scope and a level and a release aid and huge stabilizers. It's archery and it's
really, really fun. And this is hopefully gonna make it more accessible
to more people to show up at their local range,
rent a bow, go shoot some arrows, get a score,
get it posted on the internet and just see how it goes.
Cause it's really fun to build a community.
And then within that, we're gonna have a Discord server
that is exclusive for people who are competing
at the event.
So we'll be able to have people discussing back and forth,
maybe bragging rights, things like that.
And ultimately it's nothing really being awarded
other than bragging rights of being a backyard champion.
All right, so I'm excited about this.
I wanna recommend everybody Archery, try it.
I'll echo Joel who by the way is an amazing,
we don't have time for this, but an amazing thumb shooter.
He's got a gnarled Franken thumb because he does it so often,
but you can check that out.
In fact, the oldest way of shooting probably, I would say,
is a thumb release.
So you can check out Joel and his monster thumb
and his system as well, shot IQ.
But coming back to this, so the back air championship,
a few things I want to say.
Number one, this is an opportunity to have an end goal, right?
It doesn't have to be a Lancaster as it was in my case, which also it's not where I started
out, right?
I just wanted the meditative practice and quite frankly, this sort of blast from the
past of using a tool granted with some modern materials that humans
have used for thousands of years upon thousands upon thousands. And I think it is really therapeutic
for a lot of people who try it. And it's just fun. It's really fun. So now you have the
chance to have some type of goal related to giving archery a shot.
And if you don't have your backyard championship set up
and you don't have your own gear,
that's no problem whatsoever.
I didn't buy my own gear for a long time.
And you can go to a local range
and the folks are almost always incredibly welcoming,
ready to help.
Try a bunch of different stuff.
Yeah, try a compound. Yeah. Try a recurve. Yeah. Try a compound. Yeah. I recurve. Yeah. Try horse bow. Yeah.
Try ever try them all out and it will give you a regular,
at the very least. I mean, this is going to sound like an oversold,
but it will give you a regular meditation practice.
Maybe you have trouble sitting on a cushion,
closing your eyes and doing it that way. A lot of people do try this.
It for me was such an unlock for tabling my monkey mind
for an hour or two.
It's really remarkable.
So I encourage people to try it out.
And this, the Backyard Championship allows you
to shoot multiple different disciplines
and submit multiple different scores.
So if you have a compound, a recurve, a barebow,
a longbow, a horse bow, whatever you got,
you can submit a score for each discipline for indoor and outdoor. And once you submit your score,
we have these really awesome quiver pins that we'll send to you as well. So you can show that you
actually participated in the backyard championship. So, all right, where should people go? Just head
to my website, jaykaminski.com. Everything will be available there as far as the info, the leaderboard, all that info
would just be all right there.
All right.
Perfect.
All right, everybody check it out.
The very least go to range, pick up a bow.
Yeah, have a good take some intro classes.
They do fun stuff.
Some places they'll blow up balloons or throw on the black lights.
There's a lot of fun to be had.
Also if you have kids, this is an awesome activity to do with your kids.
Absolutely. And on your YouTube channel, we recorded a video that'll be coming
out soon or will be already.
Yeah. And that, and that will show gear one-on-one from Jake and then also
technique one-on-one.
Yeah. So if you're really not sure and there's nobody nearby or they're not
sure how to help you, you'll at least have a basic understanding of the equipment to be safe and to
also have a lot of fun too. So it'll be great.
So check that out. jakecominske.com folks, YouTube channel.
I guess people can find it through the website.
On the website, you can just search Jake Cominsky as well.
It'll pop up on YouTube direct. It'll pop up on any internet search as well.
Very prevalent as far as the search engine results.
Easy to find. Jake Kaminsky K-A-M-I-N-S-K-I.
Correct.
Kaminsky.com. Once again, thanks so much to you and Heather.
Yeah.
It's been a hell of a...
Quite a journey.
Awesome adventure and trip and has reinvigorated me in so many different ways. And also I will
say it's given me so much energy in a sense. It's been such a recharging activity that
it's given me a lot that I can then apply to other places.
I cannot tell you, like I've had some, you know, challenging family issues, meaning medical
issues over the last, let's call it six months in particular year. And having this as a way again,
to just take a break from that for a period of time to have a constant right. I don't need to
rely on an entire team of people to gather for a rec soccer game. It's like, no, I can just book time off in these
lanes, meaning where you would stand and practice at a range. I mean, sometimes it's like 10
bucks an hour. I mean, it's like, it's not, it's not going to break the bank. Yeah. And
rentals are generally very, very affordable and I can just take a break. I can go in two
hours just quiet my mind. And it's been such an incredible tool. So I want
to thank both of you guys again. Yeah. Thank you. Anything else you'd like to add? Any
closing comments before we wind to a close? Yeah. Archery is difficult. It's single sided,
rotational and static. So it's not exactly good for you. I mean, it's great because it
clears your mind. It's activity. You got something to focus on, but it can be a bit much for the body.
So taking care of yourself super important.
And part of that, I'll give it another plug jake, come and see.com.
Watch Jake's videos on technique.
Because if you are doing the same thing over and over and over again, you
just imagine you had a pebble in your shoe and you refuse to take it out
and you take 10 steps.
Okay.
You're fine.
Maybe you walk to Starbucks and back, you're fine.
You walk a thousand miles with that, you're going to have a big problem with your foot.
And that is true with really any repetitive motion.
There are a lot of sports with repetitive motions also applies to archery.
And the problems I think are very easy to avoid with Yeah. With a few basic pointers that you follow religiously.
Yeah, and I've got an academy of sorts coming out.
It's like a Jake Kaminsky Academy
that'll teach you the technique.
It is currently available as far as like form advice
that I give on my YouTube channel,
but this academy is an ultra premium,
high production quality that once you buy into the system, you have lifetime access. So as you Academy is an ultra premium, high production quality
that once you buy into the system, you have lifetime access.
So as you develop as an archery, you can come back and check it out
as often as you'd like.
So that's something that is in the works and we're, we're getting
very close to launching that.
That'll also be available on jaycominski.com as well.
And, uh, you know, as Joel Turner said, either way it's archery.
You should try it.
Well, thanks again, Jake. So nice to see you. And train with you, Heather.
A lot of fun.
Thank you again. And folks listening, show notes. We're going to have links to everything
as per usual, tim.blogslashpodcast. I can pretty much guarantee you there will not be another Kaminsky on the podcast as
of yet.
So you can check that out or just search Jake.
I don't think there are many Jake's in the podcast library.
And until next time, be just a bit kinder than is necessary to others.
Also to yourself.
If you're on the line and shoot a terrible shot, don't go full monkey tilt and punch
yourself in the groin
not worth it
be kind and
I appreciate the other hidden chuckle from behind the pillar
And until next time thanks for tuning in
Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just one more thing before you take off and that is five bullet Friday
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